Verticaltrx
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2009
- Messages
- 1,908
- Location
- VA
- Tractor
- Kubota B3200/L2501/SVL65-2/U35-4, IH 454/656, Ford NAA, Case 1845C/480E/450C LGP
Deere has been using aluminum castings (aluminum castings are very strong, BTW) since the older 4x00/4x10 series machines introduced in 1998 or 1999. Those mid sized CUTs came in at 2900 lbs for the bare tractor.
I'm still curious about what Deere considers a "Ship Weight" nowadays. I'm still guessing it's everything less the wheels and tires. Kubota ship weights were also low...and they weren't shipped with wheels/tires.
Assuming that's a correct assumption, 2087 lbs isn't bad at all. Figure 500 lbs for the engine, about the same for the transmission and a few hundred pounds for the drive line...hood and fenders are a stout plastic.
Shipping weight means the complete tractor, with tires (usually R1), no accessories and no fluids. It doesn't have anything to do with how the tractor is actually 'shipped'. Having looked at the 3038e closely I can say that 2000lbs sounds very reasonable.
The 3038e is much less tractor than the 4200-4400 which is why it weighs a good bit less. They put decent sized tires on them which makes them look bigger, but the tractor itself is pretty small. In most regards they are closer to the large B-series Kubota than an L-series.