Katahdin
Platinum Member
There is a MF and Yanmar dealer nearby in New Boston, I also suggest he visit there.
A couple of points of disagreement with Axlehub's otherwise great post earlier today:
1) I didn't see any post claiming SCUT 3pt hitches only lift 600 lbs. On the other hand, SCUT loaders do generally lift only about that much. The Kubota BX series is the prototypical SCUT and lift capacity is limited. I'd much rather have 600lb loader than a shovel and wheelbarrow but for very little extra money you can get a small CUT with notably more useful 1000-1200lb lift capacity.
2) while the OP stated that his woods "had been cleaned", I would take that with a major grain of salt. Five acres of woods might be clean at time of sale but NH winters will soon change that. If he wants to keep any semblance of order in his woods, he's going to be doing many hours of fallen limb removal and pruning as well as brush cutting in those "clean" woods over the next fifty years. Not a good job for a SCUT. 25-30 hp in a CUT frame with R4s would make a lot more sense. I've got nothing against SCUTs but they don't belong in the woods.
3) 95% of grapples are SSQA. Yes there are some nice bucket grapple kits and yes it is possible to get a pin on grapple for some Kubota and JD tractors but the exceptions prove the rule. Pin on grapples are rare and it is for a good reason. SSQA adapters are useful for multiple things and allow switching implements in just a few minutes. Pin ons require at least 10-15 minutes to switch each time in my experience and that makes it less convenient. A bucket grapple kit is IMO the better alternative if budget doesn't allow for SSQA and grapple.
4) I haven't priced SCUTs in a while but new they cost within a couple thousand bucks of mid 20hp CUTs. A CUT is a lot more tractor for your dollar unless you are simply mowing a yard or are working on very limited acreage.