Gale Hawkins
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,268
- Location
- Murray, KY
- Tractor
- 1948 Allis Chambers Model B 1976 265 MF / 1983 JD 310B Backhoe / 1966 Ford 3000 Diesel / 1980 3600 Diesel
I think you did right. Shucks, re-reading your posts, I KNOW you did right to walk away. Not only is that way too much money, those things wrong with it are exactly the kind of things that shouldn't be wrong with any hoe regardless of age.
IMHO, hours don't mean as much as care and maintenance. Other's may disagree.
I turned down a rental Cat hoe with 2000 hrs and bought my present JD310 with 6000 hours put on by the original owner - and the price was roughly the same for each. Actually I think I paid more for the high hour machine. In fact I know I did, as I put rear tires and two new batteries in it. But overall it looked and ran like an old machine that had been cared for. I've had it 4 years now and it was the right choice.
I know this is going to sound trite, but you sound like the kind of guy who will know the right machine when you see it - and driving it around will just confirm what your gut is already telling you. If you have to ask yourself questions, you already know the real answer.
Don't overlook JD310 and Case 580. Both of those are excellent machines, too. For the homeowner I kinda lean to the Case 580 myself because like the old JD310D&E, the Case 580s are slightly more "home mechanic friendly" than later model JDs and Cats. Good used 580s are scarce here. The few I've seen are either not for sale or beat up.
rScotty
We picked up a 1983 JD 310B 8 years ago that was very worn. The old tires had some tread but were hard with no bite so we replaced them and a lot of hoses and the starter and battery. I may have over paid at $7200 but it starts and runs after setting for up to six months and we have done a lot of ground clearing and ditching so I am pleased with it.
Any old stuff needs to be bought cheap because if much goes wrong like say a major blown engine selling it for salvage may be the best option and just going with another backhoe.
Getting all of the old fluids out took a while but since it has worked fine. Before it would quit pulling in high range after working it a couple of hours. Next time I would change out the fluids first thing but after I blew enough lines it was kind of self changing. There are both good and crap out there in the $5K-$10K range. If the owner is in love with his equipment do not bribe him to sell it too you. There are too many of us getting rid of good backhoes or estates are selling them so do not over pay.
We did fine a local former pipeline welder that reworked the buckets on both ends shortly before he died suddenly. On that note if I have old equipment that I want to keep and can find quality and affordable service at some shop out back of the house I often go overboard and fixing optional stuff that could wait like I did on the buckets on this backhoe. Old time service techs are next to impossible to find now. When I was kid they were everywhere.