Yander
Veteran Member
Stick with Kubota or Yanmar. JD is over Priced for what you get unless you get an older model that was built 100% by Yanmar. Those are harder to find because people don't want to part with them.
I owned two old Yanmar JD’s, and they were great tractors for their time, but the cost of parts on these 40 year old machines is insane, and availability is starting to become a problem.Stick with Kubota or Yanmar. JD is over Priced for what you get unless you get an older model that was built 100% by Yanmar. Those are harder to find because people don't want to part with them.
.. and attach a snow plow or forks? C’mon, there’s a reason QA tractors are bought more, and bring higher resale, than pinned bucket tractors. Very few users want to be hammering pins out and back in every time they want to change attachments, and then fabricating their own attachment mounts to fit on some odd old pin arrangement no one uses anymore.From someone who owns a tractor with a pinned bucket. I can unpin and drop my forks or bucket in two minutes on my Yanmar.
The small JD4100 tractors sold in the early 2000s were made entirely by Yanmar. These were only 20hp tractors, but they were really nice for the size. I owned one for 22 trouble-free years.I owned two old Yanmar JD’s, and they were great tractors for their time, but the cost of parts on these 40 year old machines is insane, and availability is starting to become a problem.
The last one was sold when one of my steering knuckle castings cracked. I had to buy a whole new front axle assembly, because no one carried the early version of the casting on that tractor as a stand-alone part. It was 33 years old, at the time.
The one before that was sold because it was only gear drive, manual steering 4wd (oof!), and had a fixed loader that wasn’t removable. That just didn’t work for my needs. That was a 1978 model, if I recall.
I won’t knock those antiques, they were great for the time, but wouldn’t want to rely on one as my only tractor.
When is the last time Yanmar even made a CUT for Deere?
That's a lot better than I thought, and I know Yanmar has always made great machines, but still... I don't know if I'd recommend this OP seek out a machine that's already 20 - 25 years old to start. Cost of parts is already climbing today on a machine of that age, and once you get past 30 - 35 years, availability of parts usually starts to become a problem.The small JD4100 tractors sold in the early 2000s were made entirely by Yanmar. These were only 20hp tractors, but they were really nice for the size. I owned one for 22 trouble-free years.
I own a couple of Yanmars from way back then. The YM240 built in 1980 is clearly an early 70's design, alternator, regulator etc are same as early 70's Datsun.I know Yanmar has always made great machines, but still... I don't know if I'd recommend this OP seek out a machine that's already 20 - 25 years old
Uh yeah. Pix of prior owner neglect/abuse I had to remedy in 2003. No problems since!As the owner of a [Yanmar] 226d, I would say the older yanmars were very high quality, but the issues tend to be owner neglect over the years since they were new.