Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?

   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#41  
Oh, well, I have never been so in....etc. Well John, okay yes I could have opted to get a gear version and a loader, but I wanted Hydro and a blade.
BTW, I called the guy with the 30" and the ship loader and a rear blade would be $2000 more than the front blade.

And just think the <font color=orange> ORANGE TEAM </font color=orange> don't slam their faithful this hard! why, why I may have to lose my mind and trade my 4100 in for a Kubota 7500! Well that is not going to happen anytime soon. LOL! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
BTW, I called the guy witht he 30" and the shipping brought the price up by almost $90. He recommended I go local, but they all want $325 - $375 plus tax for a 30" scoop - no way! He recommended I go local, but they all want $325 - $375 plus tax for a 30" scoop - no way!

I do have at least 4 weeks to talk about it, and I have not talked to my meighbor about that loader he apparently is not really using any longer.

So there are options and times Big John!
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#42  
jinman, sorry to hear about what happened to your Dad. Yes you now have me a little scared about that 30" scoop. If you can get enough material in it that will not trip the auto-releases that are included on the ones that I am seriously considering, but can throw the unit off balance that is scary.

Maybe i am the Donkey?
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#43  
Yes I would got for a 60" bucket and I got my weights already.
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop? #44  
John, I agree with everything you say. I just wanted to point out that it would lift a 60" scoop, not that I'd want one. Myself, I bought a used 36" scoop for $150 and I use a rear 5' blade for snow plowing. I saved the extra money and then bought a 410 loader. But one big mistake I made was buying the stupid 49" bucket for the loader. I should of went for the 54" or 60" bucket. A full 49" bucket of gravel or sand is nothing for the 410 loader and I know that it would handle a 60" bucket full just fine. Even if it wouldn't lift a full bucket of a heavy material, I'd still go with a larger bucket for handling light loose material and take a smaller bite of the heavy stuff. Hindsight is 20-20.
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop? #45  
I tried to get you for the Orange team!!!!! Finally you are making some sense trading for the 7500---yehahhh!!. Just kidding /w3tcompact/icons/shocked.gif .
Well, soon the grass will be growng, what you plan on mowing it with since you traded your lawn mower for a tractor without a MMM and I have meant to ask what is the front blade for? Yes, I am picking on you, why not?
J
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#46  
jyoutz, it is a 60" bucketed loader for me when/if i get a loader.
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop? #47  
Are we talking about a rear scoop or a rear loader? I couldn't find it on the Westendorf site. I have seen a loader bucket that attaches to the three point and comes with a hydraulic toplink is that what this is? I saw one here.<A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.AffordableEquipment.com/RearLoader.htm>http://www.AffordableEquipment.com/RearLoader.htm</A>

Chris
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#48  
Oh, Ho, so the high (too many beers) priest of the Orange, just took a shot at one of the Order of the Green, hmmmmm. Well let's see, I could push that one neighbor down the street, who has an orange tractor, tractor over the side of the mound it is parked on.

Going orange, hmm, naahhhh. I don't have anything that goes well with the color orange.
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop?
  • Thread Starter
#49  
Yep, that is pretty much it.
 
   / Loader Vs, Big Dirt Scoop? #50  
Nuru & JM-III: Thanks for the kind sympathy for my dad. That incident was forty years ago when I was 14, but I still remember it very clearly. The injury didn't slow him down much in the long run and I had to beg him to stay off that tractor when he was 84. He loved his little Ferguson TO-20 and used to brag about how much better it was than a Ford 8N. He passed away when he was 85 and was very active right up until two weeks before his death. He wouldn't/didn't want anyone feeling sorry for him.

Nuru, thanks for having a sense of humor about my "illustration"./w3tcompact/icons/shocked.gif We are all the "donkey" at some point in our lives./w3tcompact/icons/blush.gif Just last week we did a groundbreaking on my new house and I was helping move dirt with my NH TC45D. I have a 72" loader bucket, and I had it heaped with sand most of the time (attachment). Even with my boxblade on the rear, as I approached the dumpsite going downhill, the nose of my tractor wanted to take a "dive" and lift the rear wheels. My "pucker muscle" got plenty of exercise. It's amazing how much a full bucket of dirt can weigh. When you get your scoop, just please be careful. It's okay to brag about how much you can lift with your tractor, but it's also okay to feel good about how safely you can operate your tractor. If your rear scoop is full, the same rule applies as for a FEL bucket. Keep your load low, and if the tires come off the ground, drop the load to the ground and get the situation under control. Good luck.
 

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