Richard
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 5,029
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
My house is in TN. I'm currently living/working in Florida and the wife is back at the house.
I have a 7' Woods RFM. Her uncle who lives next door (and has NO business anymore on any of the machinery) is 94 years old and becoming ....shall I simply say, somewhat absent minded.
She's cutting the field in front of our house. Her uncle was kneeling by the field watching her....or so she thought.
What he was actually doing was waiting for her to finish thinking that he was still capable of driving the tractor and the rest of the farm needed bush hogged.
She gets off, says hi to him & goes inside. Seems he does remember how to start the tractor. He jumps on, fiddles with the loose wires under the dash to spark it to life.
He then proceeds to go out and do some bush hogging. I understand he also cut some areas where some timber was cut (can we all say pine tree stumps?) He then ran out of diesel and walked back to the house, forgetting where he left the tractor.
I get a call the other day from the wife. The tractor had been retrieved and refueled by her cousin. Seems the mower smoked out on her while she was cutting the field again. I think she said she got about half of it done before it started making some weird noises and had a clunk. Her cousin took the mower off to fix the belt.
Turns out the center spindle had smashed bearings and was basically flopping loose in the wind. I don't know what all is really wrong with it. He gave me a basic rundown.
He took several parts of it off, realized he could not fix that spindle so took it to the shop.
I'm getting an estimate from the shop for about $600. I said go ahead & fix it. I also said to simply make it field ready so when he picked it up, it was ready to go. (turns out the original belt was FINE and he had it at home, this was basically a decision to buy a new belt and give us a spare)
I told him what I said and he said they can't put it together yet because HE still had some of the parts.
HUH???
I call them back and without knowing to this moment what parts he's holding (idlers? side spindles?) it dawned on me that they might be ordering parts to make it 'field ready' like I asked when SOME of those expensive parts are in his hands.
He said he figured they might give a discount if he took it to them disassembled and didn't have to waste their time taking it apart. I said maybe they would do the opposite and look at that as an opportunity to fix "everything" and charge more!!
He said he never thought of that.
He said he'd take the parts over that very morning (yesterday).
I've not yet heard back from them with a final bill amount. I'm hoping he had a couple hundred dollars worth of parts in his hands. I'm really just glad I had the thought to ask some of the things I did or I would have simply paid the bill not knowing that I could have paid for parts that were 100% not needed.
Wife thinks her uncle might have contributed to the circumstance when he took the "bush hog" out to cut the farm. I said it didn't matter. He certainly had no idea what he was doing and was only trying to help. I also pointed out that this mower is perhaps 8/10 years old (I bought it used) and the part might have blown up on its own. We'll never know and I'm not going to let that become an issue.
Sure sucks though. I have a sneaking feeling that if I were there cutting the field like I usually did..... all would be fine right now.
I have a 7' Woods RFM. Her uncle who lives next door (and has NO business anymore on any of the machinery) is 94 years old and becoming ....shall I simply say, somewhat absent minded.
She's cutting the field in front of our house. Her uncle was kneeling by the field watching her....or so she thought.
What he was actually doing was waiting for her to finish thinking that he was still capable of driving the tractor and the rest of the farm needed bush hogged.
She gets off, says hi to him & goes inside. Seems he does remember how to start the tractor. He jumps on, fiddles with the loose wires under the dash to spark it to life.
He then proceeds to go out and do some bush hogging. I understand he also cut some areas where some timber was cut (can we all say pine tree stumps?) He then ran out of diesel and walked back to the house, forgetting where he left the tractor.
I get a call the other day from the wife. The tractor had been retrieved and refueled by her cousin. Seems the mower smoked out on her while she was cutting the field again. I think she said she got about half of it done before it started making some weird noises and had a clunk. Her cousin took the mower off to fix the belt.
Turns out the center spindle had smashed bearings and was basically flopping loose in the wind. I don't know what all is really wrong with it. He gave me a basic rundown.
He took several parts of it off, realized he could not fix that spindle so took it to the shop.
I'm getting an estimate from the shop for about $600. I said go ahead & fix it. I also said to simply make it field ready so when he picked it up, it was ready to go. (turns out the original belt was FINE and he had it at home, this was basically a decision to buy a new belt and give us a spare)
I told him what I said and he said they can't put it together yet because HE still had some of the parts.
HUH???
I call them back and without knowing to this moment what parts he's holding (idlers? side spindles?) it dawned on me that they might be ordering parts to make it 'field ready' like I asked when SOME of those expensive parts are in his hands.
He said he figured they might give a discount if he took it to them disassembled and didn't have to waste their time taking it apart. I said maybe they would do the opposite and look at that as an opportunity to fix "everything" and charge more!!
He said he never thought of that.
He said he'd take the parts over that very morning (yesterday).
I've not yet heard back from them with a final bill amount. I'm hoping he had a couple hundred dollars worth of parts in his hands. I'm really just glad I had the thought to ask some of the things I did or I would have simply paid the bill not knowing that I could have paid for parts that were 100% not needed.
Wife thinks her uncle might have contributed to the circumstance when he took the "bush hog" out to cut the farm. I said it didn't matter. He certainly had no idea what he was doing and was only trying to help. I also pointed out that this mower is perhaps 8/10 years old (I bought it used) and the part might have blown up on its own. We'll never know and I'm not going to let that become an issue.
Sure sucks though. I have a sneaking feeling that if I were there cutting the field like I usually did..... all would be fine right now.