Last summer, I purchased a little under four acres of land. After the sticker shock of purchasing a new tractor sent my wife into orbit, a friend of mine talked me into purchasing the original estate tractor--a 1959 International Cub Lo-Boy (an offset, red one, not one of those yellow and white, garden tractor on steroids 154s.) I spent all of last fall and winter restoring this old small tractor. I even sent most of the sheet metal through an electrolytic rust-reduction process; so, that I would have a clean, smooth substrate on which to apply the new finish. I ended up with a very pretty antique tractor that was basically useless. Why? because the PTO spins backward at engine speed. Yes, I could have gone with a Hub City PTO Reverser/Reducer at $400.00, but my $1,500 dollar investment had already blossomed into a $3,200.00 investment, and I still needed to purchase a mower (if I did not purchase the PTO reverser/reducer, I was looking at ~$1,300.00 for a Woods 42CLH.) I said the heck with it, sold my Lo-Boy to my restoration buddy, and decided to get a compact diesel and just deal with my wife.
After a couple of months of looking at every used compact tractor that was being "sold by owner," I decided to bite the bullet and look on the dealer lots. Lets say that one stands a much better chance of getting a nice used Kubota from a dealer than from an individual, that is, unless the sale revolves around a death or divorce (i..e., people do not seem to get rid of good tractors unless they are trading up.) Kubota dealers in my area do not take beat Kubotas in trade (the reason why the owners of the beat ones are selling them through the papers.) This week I purchased a B6100HSE with 449 hours on it. I paid $4,800 for the tractor (which is about $800.00 more than the beat-up, gear-drive B6100s that were being sold by their owners), but it came with a five-foot belly mower, not a four-foot mower like most of the
B5200 and
B6100 tractors that were being sold by their owners. The guy who owned this tractor was so **** about its care that he even waxed the mower deck. The paint is like new, and there is not a single ding in the sheet metal, not even on the grass chute. It is about as close to new as one is going to get in a used a tractor. It was used to mow a postage stamp-sized suburban lawn (the guy who traded it in left his original bill of sale in the owner's manual, and his address is in one of those yuppie planned urban developments.)
In closing, I had just about given up on finding a nice, used, small Kubota that was not priced within a thousand or two of the original sticker price when I found this tractor (i.e., I was prepared to purchased a new one.) Granted, it is an older model, but tractors are designed to be used for lot longer than cars.