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New vs Old Tractor
New here...greetings. I presently have 12 acres and hope to be adding another 5A cropland, 5A pasture and 10A woods. Of my present area, about 6A is hay/pasture, 2-3A in produce tillage, 1A orchard and the remaining 3A in lawn/landscaping (probably too much of the latter). It's a subsistence farm with a little commercial potential for niche farming. And, goodness knows there is fierce competition for finite cash resources.
I own a 17HP JD garden tractor that has cost me too much in maintenance each of the last few years. It is presently dead and likely needing a few hundred $ of attention.
I also have a 1947 Ford 2N that cost me $2500 about 12 years ago (with a snowplow), and I have since put in a few thousand $ in upkeep/improvements. Despite that and all the work these machines have done over the years, I can't work it hard without overheating. My mechanic insists the cooling system is OK. There are other issues, and I'm tired of babying it, and being cheap can actually be expensive, SO....
I'm seriously considering a compact tractor system. I say system, because I have a number of implements for the Ford (single plow, York rake, rear blade, rear scoop, 3 pt disk) that I will continue to use in addition to getting a FEL and probably a backhoe unit as well as a rear tiller. I'd like this same new machine to use for grass-cutting.
I've always borrowed a bigger tractor for haymaking with my bailer, rake and wagon. That's getting old, too.
I have 3 needs...lawn work, utility/market gardening and field work (haymaking with the possibility of soon planting some grain crops with more acreage). My thought is a 30-35HP compact and an older 60-75HP diesel IH or the like.
The compact may be a litle big for some of the yard work, but if I dowsize too much it will be short on utility and gardening ability. A compact will clearly be too big to mow in an orchard of dwarf and s/d trees, so I may have to fence that with geese for grass management and give up mowing it. A cute, little compact is a useless expense with a too-small loader or hoe. The bigger models seems substantial, though.
I don't think there is any escaping a larger field tractor for size, weight and capacity. I am haying on some hilly terrain. I'd really like NOT to have to buy/maintain 3 machines (including a smaller yard tractor). Frankly, I'd rather get closer to horse/ox/human power. Oil is going downhill in availability and uphill in cost, but who really knows the timetable we are on.
If there's anyone out there with time on their hands to ponder this or who have faced a similar dilemma, I'd like to hear opinions. I'm sure to be missing some piece of the puzzle. Do I buy new/used? Do I repair and not buy at all? Do I focus on REAL horsepower?
I have looked at JD, Kubota and Kioti. They are all foreign, but with varied location on assembly points. JD seems overpriced and under-featured; I do belive their parts are overpriced. Kubota sure is popular. Kioti seems to be a superior-made underdog. Both of the latter have attarctive financing with 0%, so a person would be foolish paying cash.
OK...thoughts?? Many thanks in advance.
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Re: New vs Old Tractor
Hello, BB. Welcome to CBN.
If you post this same query on TractorByNet you will get about 50 replies, with that many different opinions. Overload? Perhaps. (My guess is that most over there will say if you have 3 distinct tasks, you need 3 tractors.)
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Re: New vs Old Tractor
I'd suggest you do some economics on your situation regarding the operations and the return before you start looking at machinery. [img]/forums/images/icons/grin.gif[/img]
The amount of acreage and diversity of operations may make it difficult to support all the plans mentioned. [img]/forums/images/icons/tongue.gif[/img]
Egon [img]/forums/images/icons/grin.gif[/img]
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Re: New vs Old Tractor
I second the idea for TractorByNet. I am a member there as well. It's great!!
Kyle
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Re: New vs Old Tractor
We just bought a MF 1540 last month. Love it! It was heavier than the other tracotrs we looked at and some things that are standard on the MF are extra on the others. The MF dealer delivered it for free, put liquid in the tires for free and moved the rear wheels out for free. And it is interest free for 6 years. My husband is over on Tractorby.net and he has photos posted of it - he goes by Jimbob_rebel.
I would suggest test driving any tractors you are interested in. Jimbob test drove tractors all day and the Massey won. But thats just his opinion! You'll find people that love all the different makes.
Good luck!