[AT] Misc tractor recommendations?
jtchall at nc.rr.com
jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sun Nov 3 04:37:12 PST 2013
John S., 2 vey good points you made!
We don't deal with the amount of snow most folks on here get but
occasionaly we get some pretty nice snow events. I agree that you can run
out of HP real quick. We don't have anything with four wheel drive so that
is a consideration as well. We generally scrape snow with a 40 hp tractor
simply because it is gas (cranks easy). The only other one we have with 3pt
is a 90 hp Deere that has always been addicted to a block heater and strong
batteries in cold weather (anything under 45 deg.) Occasionaly the smaller
tractor can't take a full cut with the blade, we just deal with it by taking
a little extra time/more passes or switching to the Deere.
Never really thought about it but some estate sales I have been to really
did have some nice equipment that had not been abused. I suppose sometimes
the equipment may have been completely worn out if the fellow was older and
had made a business decision that what he had to work with was going to do
the job regardless of its condition until he was no longer able to use it.
John Hall
-----Original Message-----
From: John Slavin
Sent: Saturday, November 02, 2013 12:58 PM
To: AT at lists.antique-tractor.com
Subject: [AT] Misc tractor recommendations?
Dean:
I have a quarter mile drive to get to the blacktop, so I spent a fair amount
of time clearing our road myself. If you really want to stay red and older
iron, I'd at least suggest getting something with live pto and live
hydraulics. My old 450 works really well. It has wide front, which I think
is important for snow. I added a 3pt aftermarket hitch and 3 pt blade. It
already had my dad's international 2001 loader. My dad had taken off the
bucket and fashioned a front blade that's about 2 feet wider than the
tractor. I run the front blade about a foot off the ground and the 3pt
blade takes the snow down to gravel. You're gonna want a set of chains and
a heat houser. Now having said all that, my neighbor bought a little 50 hp
Deere with cab and front assist. The last 3-4 years, we've used that for
winter road. It's mighty nice to be inside a cab. However, I keep thinking
that he would have been better off buying something a little bit bigger,
even if a little older. !
It's not big enough to pull a bat wing mower in the summer and it doesn't
have the weight to really roll that snow.
Keep your eyes open for an estate sale. I've always thought that was a good
source because there was nothing distressed about the equipment, the farmer
just died. And like somebody else mentioned, perhaps buy something a bit
bigger than can be regularly trailered, and you'll be surprised how much
tractor you can buy.
If is was starting from scratch, the first thing I'd look at what dealer you
have available to you. For me, the nearest red dealer is a hour drive away,
whereas Deere is 5 minutes. That's a no brainer for me.
As for mowing, I have a Sears mower with a 20 horse onan engine, with a 50
inch deck. It's a beast and has been reasonably reliable for a number of
years. But the transmission is junk. It has lots of slow gears, one fast
gear and no gears where you need them. So I'd certainly get something with
hydrostatic drive, if you're going that direction. My mower did break down
this summer and I borrowed my neighbor's Deere, zero turn machine. It's
very, very handy and maneuverable. I'd seriously look at those if what
you're mowing is reasonably flat.
John Slavin
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