rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,451
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
To last forever, it has to be simple but convenient. Simple things last, but there is no since in having one so simple it is a pain to operate - or so complex that a failure cannot be fixed by any mechanic.
So I'd say my forever tractor is any well known make & mode with these check offs:
30 to 60 hp, independent injection diesel, power shift "clutchless" transmission, Cat 1/II 3pt with draft control, open center hydraulics, power steering, 2 or 4wd is OK, no special emissions equipment, adjustable rear wheel width, nicely sized SSQA loader, independent PTO. There were a lot like that.
Things I would like to see, but don't expect: remote hydrauics, creeper gears, and an air suspension seat.
A cab or canopy.. or not... is personal preference.
Just about any utility tractor from 1980 to 2012/14 (pre-Tier IV emissions control) willnall fit that list of things I want. Some were more popular than others, but that was a time when they tended to be made to last and be serviceable. Tractors of that era were not aimed at homeowers, competition between brands was based around how long they lasted in the hands of people who made their living with them everyday.
rScotty
So I'd say my forever tractor is any well known make & mode with these check offs:
30 to 60 hp, independent injection diesel, power shift "clutchless" transmission, Cat 1/II 3pt with draft control, open center hydraulics, power steering, 2 or 4wd is OK, no special emissions equipment, adjustable rear wheel width, nicely sized SSQA loader, independent PTO. There were a lot like that.
Things I would like to see, but don't expect: remote hydrauics, creeper gears, and an air suspension seat.
A cab or canopy.. or not... is personal preference.
Just about any utility tractor from 1980 to 2012/14 (pre-Tier IV emissions control) willnall fit that list of things I want. Some were more popular than others, but that was a time when they tended to be made to last and be serviceable. Tractors of that era were not aimed at homeowers, competition between brands was based around how long they lasted in the hands of people who made their living with them everyday.
rScotty