3pedal
Member
Howdy
I'm new here and am looking for my first tractor. I have 10 acres of not much i just bought. The previous owners had a couple horses, and it is mostly dry pasture.
I have about a 1/4 mile long dirt driveway that will need maintained and cleared of snow. While most snows aren't bad, we can get a big snow from time to time.
I have started looking at tractors and have what I assume is the normal sticker shock. I WANT a 4x4 diesel with a FEL and the juice to manage some equipement for mowing and such. I have several years of land scaping to do, as well as some minor dirt work.
I NEED something that will let me manage snow this winter and pull a brush hog in the summer, as well as a small trailer around the property.
Given the move, and some concrete work I need to do infront of the garage (who builds a garage with no apron at all, just dirt in front of it?) I am stuggling to pull off something new. I looked at the new 28HP Branson, for $12.5k with Loader. Seems like a reasonably good deal for a new tractor. It is a little more than I feel comfortable spending right now, and I would like a little larger tractor (more size than power). The price jumped a fair bit to the next size up.
As I was looking this weekend, a dealer had a 1984 Massy 205 sitting there he just took in on trade. It has 850 hours. He is asking $3900 for it, and will put a new FEL on it for a total of $6500 out the door. I know it isn't the tractor I really want, but maybe it would get me by for a year or two while I get settled. If it does not depreciate too much more, I could then sell it to help pay for the next one. I know squat about these things. I am pretty mechanically inclined - I moved out here in large part to have a shop to work on and play with cars. I don't have any diesel wenching experience. When I was a kid, my grandfather had a Beaver on the farm. It was a tough little thing, so I imagine this will be able to do work. It will just be slower and less comfortable than a larger one. And might break more. It also has turf tires on the back. How are those for traction in dirt and snow?
I don't have any particular brand loyalty at this time - though I would like to avoid Chinnese junk. Any thoughts or suggestions from those of you that have more expereience would be great. Or if you happen to know of a nice tractor for sale in the Colorado area :laughing:
I'm new here and am looking for my first tractor. I have 10 acres of not much i just bought. The previous owners had a couple horses, and it is mostly dry pasture.
I have about a 1/4 mile long dirt driveway that will need maintained and cleared of snow. While most snows aren't bad, we can get a big snow from time to time.
I have started looking at tractors and have what I assume is the normal sticker shock. I WANT a 4x4 diesel with a FEL and the juice to manage some equipement for mowing and such. I have several years of land scaping to do, as well as some minor dirt work.
I NEED something that will let me manage snow this winter and pull a brush hog in the summer, as well as a small trailer around the property.
Given the move, and some concrete work I need to do infront of the garage (who builds a garage with no apron at all, just dirt in front of it?) I am stuggling to pull off something new. I looked at the new 28HP Branson, for $12.5k with Loader. Seems like a reasonably good deal for a new tractor. It is a little more than I feel comfortable spending right now, and I would like a little larger tractor (more size than power). The price jumped a fair bit to the next size up.
As I was looking this weekend, a dealer had a 1984 Massy 205 sitting there he just took in on trade. It has 850 hours. He is asking $3900 for it, and will put a new FEL on it for a total of $6500 out the door. I know it isn't the tractor I really want, but maybe it would get me by for a year or two while I get settled. If it does not depreciate too much more, I could then sell it to help pay for the next one. I know squat about these things. I am pretty mechanically inclined - I moved out here in large part to have a shop to work on and play with cars. I don't have any diesel wenching experience. When I was a kid, my grandfather had a Beaver on the farm. It was a tough little thing, so I imagine this will be able to do work. It will just be slower and less comfortable than a larger one. And might break more. It also has turf tires on the back. How are those for traction in dirt and snow?
I don't have any particular brand loyalty at this time - though I would like to avoid Chinnese junk. Any thoughts or suggestions from those of you that have more expereience would be great. Or if you happen to know of a nice tractor for sale in the Colorado area :laughing: