So I am getting closer to hauling, and am curious what people like to do as far as setting transmission and brakes while the tractor is on the trailer. My thought is to drive on, chain the front, and then put it in neutral with no brakes while tensioning rear chains/straps (or vice versa -- obviously need to work against gravity here so the tractor doesn't roll off during tie-down). Then once everything is snug, set the parking brake for transport but leave it in neutral. Sound reasonable?
By the way, I came down to the wire with my vehicle purchase on 12/30 but did it in a way that I got the 2011 tax write off by putting the new vehicle in service for business use by 12/31/2011 with no personal use until 1/1/2012. I don't know how the IRS would actually verify any of that, but I followed the rules exactly and have all my receipts lined up.
I ended up with an Acura MDX, which will tow 5000#. I was leaning towards buying a separate F-150 work truck, but we just couldn't get enthusiastic about parking an extra vehicle at our house (space is already cramped) and a pickup didn't make sense for either of us as a replacement daily driver or business vehicle. So the MDX popped up as a good solution -- basically replacing my existing vehicle type preference with one that has more towing capacity. I installed a Class III hitch and wiring harness, and have a brake controller shipping to me (will plug right into the existing harness). The 5000# limit ought to hold me for another 5 years at least....
Last step is to buy the trailer, and I will move on that next week. Still debating between 76" wide landscaping trailer or an 82" wide equipment trailer (both available in 14, 16, 18 foot lengths and with the same 2 x 3500# axle arrangement). The landscape trailer would be better for hauling materials, but the equipment trailer would be better for hauling the tractor -- I'd just need to build some sides and a back gate for material transport.