northpolefolks
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2012
- Messages
- 83
You are saying that the tractor must be babied or it will break itself. I have not found that to be true. Settling for that level of mechanical competence will become an excuse for lower and lower design margins as manufacturers learn they can get away with it.
larry
I was not saying it has to be babied. I know how to say that though when appropriate. It would sound like this "That tractor has to be babied".
To be clear I don't think you can pull on a 30,000 lb object with a smaller tractor and not expect something to break. A tractor, like all tools, has it's limitations. That's understanding limiations, not babying. I don't baby my Duramax, but I let it warm up and don't run around trying to pull 40 trailers loaded with rock. Does it mean I haven't broken tools by misuse? Nope. I have a few tools in the barn that are the aftermath of my miscalcuations and good intentions. LOL.
I disagree with the mechanical competence comment. If something breaks before it should, for no justifyable reason, I will buy something else that doesn't. Sevearal years ago a certain brand of tires had numerous failures and deaths resulted. The consumers didn't keep buying that particular tire, they quit buying them and the manufaturer fixed the problem. If a tractor continues to break when it shouldn't they won't be selling many of those tractors. John Deere, Ford, IH, Case, Kubota, NH to name a few show the benefits of good workmanship.
I don't think you have to baby the LS in any way, or I wouldnt have bought one.