All purpose UTV for farm use?

   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #81  
Probably a solution we should all use!
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #82  
I had a beater Toyota 4x4 truck for a long time. The UTV being smaller and lighter can go places that the Toyota can't. Our land is steep and wooded. For us it's a huge difference. If your land's more open and flat it might not be so much of a difference. OTOH the Toyota hauled more and I could drive it into town.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #83  
I'm in this situation as well. I looked at them, and about fell over. Even used ones are expensive, it is hard to imagine. The guy I typically work with at the local dealer talks about them with a little 'derision or disgust' in his tone. He doesn't come out and say it... but I think even HE can't stomach the cost for what you get out of it.

I looked at Suzuki Samurai as someone mentioned it to me here. My biggest issue is weight. However, the big UTVs can weigh around 2000lbs anyway. If I could find one, I'd likely go with a Samurai long bed version. I think they were only available in Canada. I'm not ready to pull that trigger yet... I just keep getting by with what I am doing now. Eventually, something will have to give and I'll need to make a decision.

I have a VERY hard time spending $$$ where I cannot see the value in what I am purchasing. It is hard for me to see $15-20K value in a UTV for my purposes. I can see a LOT of value... but thus far... not THAT much for me yet.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #84  
For a while I lusted after a used Japanese mini-truck. Most of these have 4WD, they sometimes have dump beds. The big downsides for me were: they seemed overpriced for being (about) 20 years old) and nearly all are right-side drive, which the insurance companies don't like, so charge a big premium to insure for road use, and, finally, I was uncertain about availability of parts and competent maintenance for a vehicle that is so old and was never sold in the North America.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #85  
We know a group who uses and swear by there dated, mini Japanese trucks. I asked about parts for them and his response was "we get them direct from Japan, they arrive in just a few days".

For a while I lusted after a used Japanese mini-truck. Most of these have 4WD, they sometimes have dump beds. The big downsides for me were: they seemed overpriced for being (about) 20 years old) and nearly all are right-side drive, which the insurance companies don't like, so charge a big premium to insure for road use, and, finally, I was uncertain about availability of parts and competent maintenance for a vehicle that is so old and was never sold in the North America.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #86  
When it comes to UTVs, I'm not biased at all.

I also won't tell you what I've used on my farm the last 3 years.

And I have not lied once today.





IMG_20160409_182441125 (Large).jpgIMG_20160409_182542690 (Large).jpgIMG_20161028_183225405 (Large).jpgIMG_20161114_170512775 (Large).jpg
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #87  
This thread is funny. I own a Tacoma which I love and use it as work truck. I also have used UTV's for the past 10 years for working in the field. Where the UTV goes, I'd not take my truck. I'd also not use the UTV to travel very far. Go figure..
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #89  
This thread is funny. I own a Tacoma which I love and use it as work truck. I also have used UTV's for the past 10 years for working in the field. Where the UTV goes, I'd not take my truck. I'd also not use the UTV to travel very far. Go figure..

True...two different vehicles for two different purposes. I have a Tacoma too...and I don't think I'd like it in places I take my Gator. At minimum, it (the Tacoma) would get scratched all to ****...
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #90  
For many years my farm UTV was a John Deere LA with a 4x8 utility trailer.

:)

Bruce

JohnDeereLA-6.jpg

(not my photo)
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #91  
For a while I lusted after a used Japanese mini-truck. Most of these have 4WD, they sometimes have dump beds. The big downsides for me were: they seemed overpriced for being (about) 20 years old) and nearly all are right-side drive, which the insurance companies don't like, so charge a big premium to insure for road use, and, finally, I was uncertain about availability of parts and competent maintenance for a vehicle that is so old and was never sold in the North America.

I was looking at getting a Japanese mini-truck with a dump bed some years ago. I dropped the idea when I found you can't run them on the road in Vermont.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #92  
DSC04412b.jpg
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #93  
There is a web site in the US which lists all the rules and restrictions on minitrucks state-by-state (Mini-truck state laws). My brother in Colorado has two of them, but he says Colorado refuses to license them for road use.
There used to be a seller here (recently retired and closed up shop), so there are a fair few puttering around local roads; our highest speed limit is 90kph, so the minitrucks can usually keep up with traffic pretty well.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #94  
We have a mini truck dealer close by and to me they always looked top heavy, like they would be very "tippy" on hills. Is that true or are they stable like most utv's.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #95  
Since I never actually got one, I can't say from experience. However, my observation in my cabbed tractor and cabbed RTV1100 is that the cab makes it look and feel much more top-heavy than it actually is. There are whole web sites devoted to adapting mini-trucks to off-road use (including numerous videos...Google "off-road mini truck"); they seem to do pretty well when fitted with aggressive tires and maybe a modest lift kit.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #96  
We have a mini truck dealer close by and to me they always looked top heavy, like they would be very "tippy" on hills. Is that true or are they stable like most utv's.

I have 2 of them,1 street legal that just goes to town and back and the other a Suzuki 4x4 that I have put a dump and scissor lift on and use only around our property which is much closer to vertical than horizontal and it is very stable.I built another Suzuki mini for my son, in Colorado, to use for hunting and he gets along fine with it. When I was building it it was really light in the rear end, it would skip the rear tires going down our steep, paved driveway where mine with the dump/scissor apparatus is very stable because of the extra weight.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #97  
I tried to enter the Farm Utility vehicle set a few years back. 500 acres grain farm and 120 acres pasture / timber. Livestock. family. After shopping and all of the sticker shock, I bought a 20 year old Toyota pickup for $1400. Still use it every day. Heater, windshield, haul & drag, parts availability, go anywhere, bed with tailgate, street legal. Still can't afford a UTV.

Recently bought a 2017 Kawasaki Mule DXT diesel 4x4. I checked out honda and polaris and kubota. I needed a work vehicle and the kawasaki was the only one that met my requirements. Yes they are pricey but easy to justify as a business vehicle. I understand i could have bought a cheap pick up truck but its way quicker and easier getting in And out of the mule. I use it every day for farm work and its easy to get into tight places. It seats 6 passengers with a small cargo bed or quickly converts to 3 passenger mode with a larger cargo bed. Actually i drive my family of 7 around in it regularly. Anyway if i did not own a business that benefits from having it i probably would not have spent the 16k. But since i do its money well spent. I would not trade it for a pickup truck of equal value under any condition. No way. But i respect those that feel otherwise.
 
   / All purpose UTV for farm use? #98  
I haven't read every post in this thread so forgive me if I repeat - but . . .

Experience has shown that most ATVs, UTVs, etc. can pull much more than their rating. This is because the real limiting factor is not what it will move -- its what it will stop. A large ATV weighs around 600 pounds, add a 200 pound rider and you get a gross weight of 800 pounds. Towing capacity may be 1,000 pounds but there are lots of people who will state that they successfully have towed 2,000 pounds [including me]. But when you hit the brakes, you really feel the push from behind and in a tight spot it can be really dangerous -- like getting pushed out onto the road at an in opportune time.

So give this some thought as you move forward.
 

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