Dividing line

   / Dividing line #11  
Al, your question can be answered believe it or not by yet another question---what if Kubota also stated that the B7500 was a slightly larger Garden Tractor? Would this have any effect upon your purchase decision?, your enjoyment or your tractors functionality?
Sooooo, then what if the 7500 was presented as a large garden tractor and not a tiny, the very tinyest then if the BX is a GT, compact utility tractor?? /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif
Perhaps then some might consider a tiny utility tractor without position control to be no more than a GT with big tires, if such were the case then would the 2410 be the smallest real compact but then maybe someone else yet again might consider that only tractors with a wheelbase greater than 70 inches are real tractors.
So then were does that leave you and me---that being the case you and I own garden tractors not compacts as do most everyone else here--hope y'all enjoying your garden tractors.
J
 
   / Dividing line #12  
A body of water is a pond when your buying it and a lake when your selling it. Thats easy!
 
   / Dividing line #13  
Tres,

<font color=orange>A Rose by any other name is still a Rose</font color=orange>/w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif

Al
 
   / Dividing line #14  
<font color=blue>In my thoughts the JD4600 and the Kubota L4610 are about the end points of the compact, anything larger is no longer a compact utility tractor but a utility tractor.</font color=blue>

I agree Tres, I think the large L's are the biggest of the compacts and the small M's are the beginning of the utilities. With Kubotas at least the dividing line is pretty clear - with some others it gets a little fuzzy.

TBone
 
 
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