Second experience roading tractor

   / Second experience roading tractor #31  
My old tractor is I believe 24 hp. For working it is a great compact tractor, fits places my buddy’s slightly larger 40hp will not. While it is a pain to strap it down on the trailer, I rarely “road” my tractor even for short distances—people drive way to fast, and with hills, even with lights and added flashers, I have had that pucker factor many times when “roading” my tractor even for the short distance of less than 2 miles. About my limit for “roading”. Not sure of my top speed gear, but with hills involved, it is a mute point—high range high gear will not pull the hills.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #32  
25 HP is a respectable size that allows you to do most small acreage tasks comfortably. Keep in mind that horsepower ratings for cars and trucks is measured completely differently than for tractors. Your tractor could probably pull a car out of the ditch, but your car couldn't pull your tractor out.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #33  
I have about a mile and a half on the road to get to one of our tracts. It's never been something that I am comfortable with. Most drivers are doing a decent job but it only takes one idiot.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #34  
Last weekend in Ohio on a State Hwy ... I pulled over in the grass as far as I dared and slowed down, so did he ... We both waved with our whole hand! :)

GRMN0003 (2).JPG


The county road I live on is paved, but no paint, less than 20' wide ... State speed limit is 60 MPH! A few corners I need most of the whole road, glad when the leaves fall so I can see around the corners, I pull a 53' trailer behind me .... Idiots are all over the country!
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #35  
My tractor has full lighting, but I don't use the turn signals, they kinda look like brake lights. I use hand signals, but even then some drivers don't have a clue.
We've had a large influx of people building houses that lived in the city, that think the county road is their personal driveway.
I was turning left into my driveway one sunny day and some small red car honked his horn at me because he had to slow down or hit the tractor broadside.
To be fair, Indiana law says if a county road is not posted otherwise, the speed limit is 50 MPH.
In today's society, hand signals are a foreign language. but then, so is courtesy and road respect. And we *ALL* know the short-cut hand signals given to tractor operator on the road by impatient drivers.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #36  
Around here in the spring and fall a traffic jam is two tractors or combines meeting on the township or county roads. Combines with duals are around 13 - 14 ft wide. Articulating 4 WD with duals are 15 - 17 ft wide. Most township roads are 16 - 18 ft so someone or both go in the ditch to pass. I have had citidiots challenge me when moving through narrow area with guard rails on both sides. I am at 16 1/2 ft, 570 HP, approx 70,000 lbs with implements so should be visible with flashing lights front and rear. Country folk pull off and wave with there whole hand while citidiots wave with one finger.

Farthest fields are around 15 miles from home so really don’t think much about driving from field to field. Been doing for 50+ years.
citidiots! Thank you - my new favorite word!!
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #37  
The trouble with roading a big tractor is usually you are hooked to a large implement. Trying to get down a two lane road with heavy trafic with mail boxes and road signs every few hundred feet is a nightmare with a 20 ft wide harrow on the back.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #38  
In 67 I drove a combine for a custom cutter, it was about 13' wide, with about a 13mph top speed. Interseting with people trying to pass with you taking up most of the road. I wanted to turn left and watched a pickup climb the guy wire on a power pole. State roads were usually OK. Some of the township roads, well it became a challenge to pass a car coming the opposite direction. Then in 68 stepped up to a bigger machine that was about 15' wide. One time went thru a small town with cars parked on both sides with inches to spare.
Left that job after 20 years and went to work for a mobile home park owner. You want to have fun? try moving a 70' long 14' wide home down a public highway. Everyone pulls over at the narrowest place for you to pass. Usually between two poles, or a culvert and a building, etc.
Over the years there have been four tractors locally that have been hit by a car or truck. One was mowing along 83 and was hit by a truck, didn't see it but the said there was no part of the tractor that one man couldn't pickup by themselves. Another there was an older farmer hit on his JD 2010 he lived and the tractor was repaired. Another was a JD towing an empty gravity box and attempting to turn left into a field, knocked the back wheel off the tractor. Again another tractor turning left while hauling a turd hearse and knocked the front axle out of the tractor.

As for SMV signs it is interesting how the popo will stop a tractor or equipment if one is not showing but can never see them when they are used to mark driveways. A few years ago a local borough installed them on top of speed limit signs. I wrote them and advised them it was a illegal use. They wrote back the chief checked it out and it was OK. Well I got some information about the legal use and they cryed "but it cost a lot of money to put they up". Guess they did so checking and found it was an illegal use and painted over them and eventually the disappeared.

When it was safe I would pull over and allow the traffic behind me pass, it was better than having an impatient driver try to pass me.

Since many farms are now growing houses the problem has only gotten worse.

Be safe, be careful there are a lot of impatient, know it all drivers out there that own the road, especially your half.
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #39  
I posted several years ago about my first experience roading my tractor. It was unnerving. I didn't account for how underpowered the machine was, trying to climb hills at a speed that motorists behind me might find a little more tolerable.

Yesterday I roaded it to a job my son-in-law was doing, 2.1 miles away. The goals included helping dig a trench, moving a big concrete well cover, and pulling a concrete ring out of the ground. Trying to be ready for anything, in addition to FEL bucket I brought my FEL forks and my 3pt counterweight, and chains and sledges and digging bars etc etc. With the rears filled, all this weighs a good 5,000 lbs, and the motor is only 25 horsepower. By way of comparison, my not-very-racy station wagon weighs 3,500 lbs and has a 182 hp motor, so the tractor should have a small fraction of the pep the station wagon has. We are talking seriously weak performance on the road. For ground engagement it's a fine little tractor, but it's amazing how going, say, 35 mph in a car really sucks up the power.

In top gear (12th) this tractor can do about 14 mph, but with only a slight uphill grade it grinds to a stall. I've driven this route countless times, but there were some uphill grades small enough I'd never noticed them, and the tractor couldn't climb them. I kept having to stop, choose a gear from 9 to 12 that I thought would work, and go up the hill. 9th gear worked on the worst climbs.

But it worked. I don't see doing it often, or far. People drive too fast on these narrow curving hilly country roads. However in the intervening years I had looked up the worst grades, and measured the grade on my driveway so I could compare, and I had some idea how tall a gear would work in each of the worst spots. I do have lights, including flashers, a well placed SMV placard, and insurance. I tried hard to drive safely, accounting for all the issues I could think of.

I completely get why bigger farm tractors that sometimes pull trailers on the road have to be so powerful.
A friend and I decided to raise a Holstein steer for beef. He had a barn and I had a one-acre paddock in a field, so he kept Roger during the winter and I grazed the beast during the green months. We lived two miles apart, and we walked him between his stall and his pasture in spring and fall, with a Volkswagen kamper following behind with its emergency flashers on. Now THAT was a holdup for traffic on the hills!
 
   / Second experience roading tractor #40  
Im use to seeing farm equipment running down rural roads, i can understand they have to move between fields.

But last week i came upon a track driven skid steer driving down a rural lake side road with a skidder head attached. Doing maybe 4 MPH. I was maybe 30th car behind. No way for him to pull over, unless he likes water.

I was PISSED. At some point, you need to get a trailer.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2013 XLR THUNDERBOLT 35X14 5TH WHEEL CAMPER (A52472)
2013 XLR...
SET OF (7) JACK STANDS (A53843)
SET OF (7) JACK...
2008 JOHN DEERE 672D MOTOR GRADER (A52705)
2008 JOHN DEERE...
2006 CHEVROLET EXPRESS SERVICE VAN (A54313)
2006 CHEVROLET...
2021 John Deere 333G Compact Track Loader, 390 Hours, High Flow Hydraulics, Ride Control (A55218)
2021 John Deere...
2006 Toyota Tundra 4X4 Pickup Truck (A53424)
2006 Toyota Tundra...
 
Top