Did a little reading on the MF 1734E this morning and looks to be a nice little economy tractor. I like the three range hydro and consider this a plus. The narrow width is good about 52 inches+ but the wheelbase is longer than expected at 68 inches. It has a transmission driven pto instead of independent so a clutch pedal is used to disengage/engage the rear pto. No mid pto offered. Single brake pedal on right with treadle pedal so no split brakes for steering corrections while using the loader. It does have slightly better hydraulic flow than some of the other tractors such as the Deere 3032E which are very similar in build.
For fel work without split brakes this tractor will be difficult to work with unless the ground is dry. The 68 inch wheelbase is rather long for a small tractor resulting in wider radius turns. This tractor would be better suited for work in open areas than a more confined suburban lot with trees and plantings. This tractor is not well suited for mowing a lawn with trees and other obstacles which I suspect will be the primary need of the OP. It also isn't well suited for fel work, without split brakes you cant back drag the fel very far before you need to stop and correct your heading. Driving forward with the fel bucket down with turf tires would be even more difficult to steer. While chains will help somewhat with steering putting them on and taking them off to change between mowing and landscape work will get old real fast.
On a limited budget I would much prefer to have a slightly smaller tractor with better features than a larger tractor with these handling issues. A smaller properly equipped scut will take less time to mow a typical lawn with trees and plantings. A zero turn or all wheel steer will mow much faster and closer to edges resulting in less trimming work. Between the trimming work and the chains I suspect this will result in an unhappy user after a few seasons.
I would recommend that most consumers buy what will work the best for 90% of their needs, the remaining work 10% you deal with best you can.
Very well said. My wheelbase is longer and I have no problems with loader work / steering and rarely (but sometimes) use the split brakes. I wouldn't dream of mowing my lawn with my tractor!
Would be interested to know how many hours a year the OP expects to work in the woods, move snow, mow etc. The OP seems dead set on doing something that few recommend - that is use the same tractor for the lawn and woods work. I also have no idea what type of woods work the OP expects to do. A lot can be done with a tractor for the size the OP has landed on. However, he is bound to be disappointed because 1400 pounds of breakout isn't really enough to uproot a lot of the stuff the grows in the woods. And as you mentioned this tractor isn't really suited for the lawn. has the OP landed on something too small for forestry and too big for the lawn? Maybe. But I've seen a lot of ~30 hp tractors with turfs mowing lawns and I certainly did a lot of work in the woods with my 19 hp CUT (although the lack of loader breakout force at 1600 pounds was indeed frustrating, my current ~4,000 pounds of loader breakout force is a dream by comparison yet it is still easy to find the limits in the woods).
I suspect that 90% of the OP's time will be lawn mowing. As such, a nice zero turn or front mount mower should be the first priority. A used small skid steer or larger used loader tractor, or just renting when needed should be considered for the other tasks.
Here's an example of my uses and tools for it in case this is in any way helpful. I try to have the right tool for things I do a lot but also am very economically minded and like things that are multi-purpose (i.e. rear hydraulic angle blade instead of more single purpose front snow blade):
40 hrs / year mowing - Used commercial Exmark Laser Z 52" (was 80 hrs per year with residential unit)
20 - 40 hrs / year moving snow on 6 properties - Kioti DS4510HS Loader snow bucket / hydraulic angle back blade
15 hours / year splitting wood - stand alone 22 hp splitter (own 25% share, we pass it around)
30-50 hours / year storm clean up, clearing new areas of woods, tearing out stumps and rocks, wood gathering, landscaping / construction - Kioti DS4510HS Loader tooth bucket, forks, stump bucket / hydraulic angle back blade
5 hours / year of hay rides - Kioti DS4510HS + trailer
4 hours per year maintaining 5000 square foot gravel drive (my kids tear it up a lot with buggy) - Kioti DS4510HS w/ hydraulic angle back blade
Post holes - once and done - Joint purchase 3pt digger with friend who need holes also - $400 out of pocket.