Appreciate you sharing your experience. You make a good point about the attachments. It's easy for me to get caught up in thinking about all the different things I could do with a bunch of attachments but in reality I'd probably only use a handful of them regularly.
Here's what I bought back in 2001...
60" finish mower
48" brush cutter
Pallet forks
Small rock bucket with teeth
Large light material bucket
60" power angle snow plow with gauge wheels.
I bought the armrests and loading ramps as well.
The arm rests are great! The loading ramps were necessary because I used to remove my pickup truck tailgate and back the PT425 into the bed with either the mower or brush cutter attached. OR, I'd nest the forks in the small bucket and then the small bucket in the large bucket.
We eventually bought an 18' car hauler trailer.
Total package was around $13K. Yikes!
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The forks are very handy for moving logs for firewood and prying out bushes and small sapling stumps. And the occasional giant clamshell move...
I added the backstop to the forks I got from a friend. You can't see it from this image, but there are two yellow forks attached the same width as the backstop. Great for unstable things.
I also bought a blank Quick Attach plate. To that, I've added a 2" receiver tube. This is great for putting in things like a trailer ball hitch to move trailers around, a hitch ring for attaching chains and straps, etc... it's kind of unlimited as to what you can put in that receiver. I made a soil slicer from a plow share and use it to edge my driveway, and I made an 8" wide sod remover for stripping sod from the edges of our flower beds out of some more plow shares. A boom pole will be next on my list.
The mower gets used once a week now. The brush cutter a few times a year to mow a few miles of trails. It destroys anything in its path.
We don't get much snow anymore, but when we did, the power angle snow blade is fantastic! Not only does it angle left and right, it dumps and curls like a bucket. You can stack snow 6' high easily. It is so much faster than a bucket.
The small bucket with teeth is great for pushing in to loose material like larger rocks, and breaking sod. The large bucket with straight edge is great once you get a break in the sod, to get under it. Also makes quick work of gravel, crushed limestone, sand, mulch, etc...
It's just as fast going forward as in reverse, so that's when the arm rests really come in handy. Kinda like a locomotive engineer looking backwards out the window.
Anyhow, after 23+ years of owning it, if I had to buy another one, I would.
If I had one regret, I should have gotten the grapple bucket. It is the same as the rock bucket with teeth, plus a grapple. Other than that, I'm good.
Good luck in your decision making process.