Anonymous Poster
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
- Messages
- 29,678
Sorry - southern Minnesota.
My point was not that my stuff never breaks - I guess around here most everyone has a shop & does their own repairs. Round balers are much simpler that square balers - for specialized parts anyhow, round balers are mostly off-the-shelf - Vermeer especially; the farm supply store has lacing & belts & chain & is open until 9:00pm, the Napa store has bearings & (some) sprockets & is open until 8:30, and 'everybody' has a welder in the shop for the cracked bigger items. Most folks stock up on the reglar consumables & breakables at the begining-of-year dealer sales, and we go from there.
It's not that we don't need the dealer, & I didn't mean to imply that. It's just that most folks around me can fix or improvise faster than running into the house to call the dealer & wait for him to come & pay the extra expenses. We'll make it work, fix it right when it's raining.
When the breakdown is serious, you go borrow the neighbor's machine to finish up - much quicker than waiting for a dealer, and your neighbor will be needing help someday soon as payback.
That's how things are done here. No right or wrong, just how it is for 'here'. When writing on the internet, it's easy to forget that things can be quite different 'there' than it is 'here'. That applies to me as much as it does to you. But I'm happy with 'here' - I don't like depending on the dealer - I'd go broke - those service calls are aweful. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif That bearing I repaired myself at ~4:30pm & was back in the field in less than an hour involved a trip to town, new large roller bearing & flanges. I got change back from a $20 and lost less than an hour of time. Could a dealer match that in either time or $$$? Neither Yellow or Green would 'here'.
--->Paul
My point was not that my stuff never breaks - I guess around here most everyone has a shop & does their own repairs. Round balers are much simpler that square balers - for specialized parts anyhow, round balers are mostly off-the-shelf - Vermeer especially; the farm supply store has lacing & belts & chain & is open until 9:00pm, the Napa store has bearings & (some) sprockets & is open until 8:30, and 'everybody' has a welder in the shop for the cracked bigger items. Most folks stock up on the reglar consumables & breakables at the begining-of-year dealer sales, and we go from there.
It's not that we don't need the dealer, & I didn't mean to imply that. It's just that most folks around me can fix or improvise faster than running into the house to call the dealer & wait for him to come & pay the extra expenses. We'll make it work, fix it right when it's raining.
When the breakdown is serious, you go borrow the neighbor's machine to finish up - much quicker than waiting for a dealer, and your neighbor will be needing help someday soon as payback.
That's how things are done here. No right or wrong, just how it is for 'here'. When writing on the internet, it's easy to forget that things can be quite different 'there' than it is 'here'. That applies to me as much as it does to you. But I'm happy with 'here' - I don't like depending on the dealer - I'd go broke - those service calls are aweful. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif That bearing I repaired myself at ~4:30pm & was back in the field in less than an hour involved a trip to town, new large roller bearing & flanges. I got change back from a $20 and lost less than an hour of time. Could a dealer match that in either time or $$$? Neither Yellow or Green would 'here'.
--->Paul