RoninB4
Well-known member
First time tractor owner so my opinion is just an opinion and not always valid. Formerly worked on Ag-Con equipment back when Fiat purchased Allis (nicknamed Fat-Alice in the shop). Worked on a few of the D-8 crawlers and road graders with no power steering. Also been a toolmaker for 35 years and no stranger to multi-ton machinery and work pieces in the multi-ton range. Bought my first house and wanted a tractor, lots of reading/research. Guidelines suggested will be:
1) Budget- this quickly separates the "want" from the reality of "afford"
2) Required duties- Yeah I'd like more HP but how often will I need ALL of it?
3) How will repairs be done?- Bigger tractors mean bigger fasteners 1/2" drive isn't enough a lot of the time. Torque multipliers have been employed and not enjoyed. New/bigger tools may be required as the HP and tractor size increases. Consider this in your budget.
4) Part availability- A Belarus may be a good deal but how about getting parts for it? Grey market tractors don't have dealer support for a reason, even part numbers won't match.
5) Dealer- If you're not going to repair it you better have a good dealer nearby and a trailer to haul it to. House call tech charge accordingly too.
6) What is available- Lots of great bargains too far away with not enough trailer to get it.
Worked on a few Kubota's and liked the build quality, seem to be very popular in this area for durability but I couldn't afford one with 4WD and the attachments I wanted, JD price out of my budget too. I ended up with a Ford 1900 30HP (Shibaura diesel) w/4WD (sloped property) a FEL and a backhoe. It's had some "creative" repairs done I'm working through. There are some videos about buying a used tractor on the net, look them up. Standard attachments don't work on the non-standard 3 point hitch some compact tractors have so look into this. Don't delude yourself into thinking a garden tractor is going to do more than suburban type garden work, a bolt-on bucket has been known to break the frame by over working/overloading it. Good advice from everybody here, I'm still new at being a tractor owner.
1) Budget- this quickly separates the "want" from the reality of "afford"
2) Required duties- Yeah I'd like more HP but how often will I need ALL of it?
3) How will repairs be done?- Bigger tractors mean bigger fasteners 1/2" drive isn't enough a lot of the time. Torque multipliers have been employed and not enjoyed. New/bigger tools may be required as the HP and tractor size increases. Consider this in your budget.
4) Part availability- A Belarus may be a good deal but how about getting parts for it? Grey market tractors don't have dealer support for a reason, even part numbers won't match.
5) Dealer- If you're not going to repair it you better have a good dealer nearby and a trailer to haul it to. House call tech charge accordingly too.
6) What is available- Lots of great bargains too far away with not enough trailer to get it.
Worked on a few Kubota's and liked the build quality, seem to be very popular in this area for durability but I couldn't afford one with 4WD and the attachments I wanted, JD price out of my budget too. I ended up with a Ford 1900 30HP (Shibaura diesel) w/4WD (sloped property) a FEL and a backhoe. It's had some "creative" repairs done I'm working through. There are some videos about buying a used tractor on the net, look them up. Standard attachments don't work on the non-standard 3 point hitch some compact tractors have so look into this. Don't delude yourself into thinking a garden tractor is going to do more than suburban type garden work, a bolt-on bucket has been known to break the frame by over working/overloading it. Good advice from everybody here, I'm still new at being a tractor owner.
Last edited:
... Steve
Not sure why you have to gaslight trying to infer they are like a two cylinder NF tractor?