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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Topeka, KS
Posts: 48
| Yes, it leaves an imprint if the ground is reasonbly moist. I usually mow at home with our JD garden tractor which has turf tires and a 54" deck. I have mowed at home with the B which has R4's and it does ok, but you have to watch the turns. That is where it will chew up the grass, especially if it is in 4WD. If it is fairly wet, I can see where I have just driven across the lawn for a day or two. I use a 55 gal sprayer with mine and I can see where I go with it for a day. But it can be used on the yard to mow, especially if you take the FEL off to take more weight off. But since I have the garden tractor, I use it anyway. One thing about the BX's to not is the ROPS don't fold unless you go with the BX25 with the BH. That may or may not be an issue for you. The other issue for me on BX vs B is the B had more ground clearance which was important on our other property.
__________________ Kubota B2920, MMM, FEL, 5' Bush Hog Squeeler Rotary Mower, 5' Bush Hog Box Blade, 5' RBT1550 Land Pride Rear Blade, 55 gal. Boomless Sprayer, KK Utility carrier |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Gold Member Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Central VA
Posts: 389
| Where are you located? You might try sending a PM to davitk he had a L3240 he was trying to sell. Also look at Used Kubota Tractors or Kubota Tractors of North Carolina - Carver Equipment in Dunn: we stock and sell new and used Kubota tractors, kubota parts, used kubota tractors, rtv, diesel, for sale, mower, dealers, engine, backhoe, loader, bx, accessories, bx24, 900, generator, r people on here have had good luck with both. I had a B7800 and now have a L3940. I use mine for a good amount of mowing with some hills and don't have much trouble with leaving marks on the lawn. I have R4 tires. I just upgraded from a 6 to 7 foot finish mower. I'm a believer in the buy a little bit bigger than you think you need. I had a B7800 and it was ok but I like the bigger tractor even better. It would have been much cheaper to buy a bigger tractor the first time and with 15 acres you could definitely justify a bigger tractor. The only reason I think you should look at a B series is if the small size would be of be better such as between trees or in the woods Towing would be easier with the smaller tractor.
__________________ L3940HST FEL IAFF Local 1568 Last edited by medicshawn; 11-05-2009 at 08:53 PM. |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Platinum Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Beaver Creek, MI
Posts: 588
| It is difficult to find a tractor that meets "every" need. Well, almost impossible. The best we can do is find one that meets most needs in a priority basis. You have a lot of land and lots of work. If you want to get a B, it will be difficult to find one that is powerful enough to blow through your field work and still be light enough to run over your lawn. If the lawn is a high priority, then a smaller B would be almost the same weight as the larger BXs. This is important to know. A smaller B would not likely harm your lawn, but would be more time consuming in the field. Its a trade off. Might be a good one. If you get the really large B or small L, you'd be great in the field, but getting a little heavy for your lawn, depending on your soil type. The weights are listed on Kubota.com for your study. Remember, weight alone is one thing, but if the tires displace that weight, it all comes out in the wash. There will be a number of L owners tell you they don't mark the lawn.
__________________ BP "Beaver Creek: Not quite the middle of nowhere, but you can see it from here" |
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| | #16 (permalink) |
| Gold Member Join Date: May 2007 Location: Central NY
Posts: 480
| 60" hog best on at least the B7800, B3200, or B3030. It'll work on the B2x20, but I wouldn't go there. The B2x20s have 3 PTO positions and there is always confusion about it. As another poster indicated, they are either 1) both off 2) mid and rear together or 3) just rear. You can't run just the mid PTO by itself. You can run just the rear by itself (at either 540 or 960). For me the heavy use of MMM led me to the B2620. The L3240 was WAY too big for MMM and the B3030 was also bigger and didn't have a suspended deck, but a ground contact one. I'm thinking at least B3200 or B3030 if you want the deluxe features.
__________________ EtW - Kubota B2620 |
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| | #17 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 43
| Quote:
I'm thinking of something along the lines of a B2630 or 3030. BTW- the property is in Western TN | |
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| | #18 (permalink) | |
| Platinum Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Somerset, Ky
Posts: 838
| Quote:
__________________ 2009 B3200HST FEL 60" bucket, 2009 BX2660 MMM FEL, 2008 F2680E 6' rear discharge deck, Box Blade,6' RFM, Landscape rake, Ratchet Rake, Ferguson overseeder,Kubota Tiller, forks, PHD 12" auger and Fertilizer spreader and Horse Drawn disk 09 WRX Subaru, 03 Dodge Dakota 4x4, 09 Traverse and 08 Subaru Impreza Sport | |
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| | #19 (permalink) |
| Platinum Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Beaver Creek, MI
Posts: 588
| Weight My neighbor and I share duties here on our adjoining properties. He's got a B and me the BX. We trade off, depending on the task. The BX, while too low to the ground for your purposes is virtually as heavy as most of the Bs. That is the point. The smaller B just is not heavier, so should be considered. But even the L tractors, which can get heavier, can displace that weight evenly. Depends a lot on tires and what implements are left on, adding weight. The models you mentioned would be fine. There is no "perfect", "do it all" tractor. You will love the one you choose and make it work. Mowing with a TLB means switching out implements. But if you want those tools, you gotta do what you gotta do. Also, agree totally with JT. No way a B with R4s is as gentle as a BX with turfs. That's just wrong.
__________________ BP "Beaver Creek: Not quite the middle of nowhere, but you can see it from here" |
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