boggen
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2011
- Messages
- 3,789
- Location
- Trivoli, IL
- Tractor
- SSTT (Sideways Snake Tain Tractor) and STB (sideways train box) tractor, dirt harvester
as much as i love the cab on the old ford 555c loader backhoe. it is a pain in rear in the woods, or in areas were i am in tight spaces, and trying to get out of the cab.
the other issue with the old ford, is wasps, find there way into the cab and end up building nests :/
i don't have a/c in the cab, so in the extreme hotter days, it can be rather unbearable inside the cab, with windows open, it is hotter in the cab than out of the cab in direct sun light.
if you end up getting a oil leak (hydraulic leak), or oil spill inside a cab, *ughs* your lungs will get nailed. and it will be leak breathing through an oil bottle.
cabs can be a tad bit harder to see through and around. FEL (front end loader) work, and looking down side of engine to edge of bucket. along with trying to look over side of rear tires to see how close you are from hitting something. as ya try to maneuver around.
pesky limb smack in the face is the worst, but so are the leg spankings and arm spankings. i like the cab for that, but if i am only mowing (bush hog / rottory cutting) pasture or like a couple times a year. i could most likely live without a CAB, do to i would end up catching the mirrors and yanking the mirrors completely off, and cab up on more tree limbs than anything.
cab tractors more likely to come with a bigger alternator on tractor, and either already have upper front and rear lights, or be wired to have those extra lights. (big thing for me)
cab tractors can be a pain in the rear to wash the outside of the windows. its not easy to climb around a tractor even with a ladder. and or some sort of extended window washer thing / mop.
i like to carry "tools" with me. cab tractor kinda of a pain in the rear about adding stuff (modification tool holders) to the outside of the cab and around the cab to hold tool boxes or long handle items (shovels, rakes, etc...) vs an open station ROPS.
open station tractor, i get the power washer out, take some plastic and cover up what i need to. and just wash all the crud off the unit from the pile of mud i left in the seat from the last O'crud incident, to mud 2" plus thick on your boots that gets all over the place.
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hot summers mild winters is one thing. but it is the humidity that is the killer....
110F zero humidity in Arizona (desert in a sense) feels like 85F with high humidity here in Illinois (4 seasons, hot summer 100 to 105F, and cold winters 0 to -10F)
if you have high humidity, cab with A/C might be a good choice.
low humidity and high temps, a ROPS might be simple enough, just to keep the sun from beating on you, and keeping you in the shade.
if ya going to be seating on the tractor non stop for hours at a time, a CAB for sure.
if ya getting on and off the tractor multi times a day, i may choose a open station tractor.
the other issue with the old ford, is wasps, find there way into the cab and end up building nests :/
i don't have a/c in the cab, so in the extreme hotter days, it can be rather unbearable inside the cab, with windows open, it is hotter in the cab than out of the cab in direct sun light.
if you end up getting a oil leak (hydraulic leak), or oil spill inside a cab, *ughs* your lungs will get nailed. and it will be leak breathing through an oil bottle.
cabs can be a tad bit harder to see through and around. FEL (front end loader) work, and looking down side of engine to edge of bucket. along with trying to look over side of rear tires to see how close you are from hitting something. as ya try to maneuver around.
pesky limb smack in the face is the worst, but so are the leg spankings and arm spankings. i like the cab for that, but if i am only mowing (bush hog / rottory cutting) pasture or like a couple times a year. i could most likely live without a CAB, do to i would end up catching the mirrors and yanking the mirrors completely off, and cab up on more tree limbs than anything.
cab tractors more likely to come with a bigger alternator on tractor, and either already have upper front and rear lights, or be wired to have those extra lights. (big thing for me)
cab tractors can be a pain in the rear to wash the outside of the windows. its not easy to climb around a tractor even with a ladder. and or some sort of extended window washer thing / mop.
i like to carry "tools" with me. cab tractor kinda of a pain in the rear about adding stuff (modification tool holders) to the outside of the cab and around the cab to hold tool boxes or long handle items (shovels, rakes, etc...) vs an open station ROPS.
open station tractor, i get the power washer out, take some plastic and cover up what i need to. and just wash all the crud off the unit from the pile of mud i left in the seat from the last O'crud incident, to mud 2" plus thick on your boots that gets all over the place.
================
hot summers mild winters is one thing. but it is the humidity that is the killer....
110F zero humidity in Arizona (desert in a sense) feels like 85F with high humidity here in Illinois (4 seasons, hot summer 100 to 105F, and cold winters 0 to -10F)
if you have high humidity, cab with A/C might be a good choice.
low humidity and high temps, a ROPS might be simple enough, just to keep the sun from beating on you, and keeping you in the shade.
if ya going to be seating on the tractor non stop for hours at a time, a CAB for sure.
if ya getting on and off the tractor multi times a day, i may choose a open station tractor.