I'm in the final stages of purchasing a BX23 (tractor, loader, backhoe) from a local dealer. They are not the most communitive people - I feel like I can barely get answers to really important questions - so I'm posing this here.
I have a LOT of rocks on my property. I purchased the mechanical thumb for the backhoe so I can pick the reasonably sized ones up. I'm assuming "reasonably sized" would be limited to what fits into bucket. I started thinking and am now wondering what the weight limit for lifting would be for the for the current series BX23 backhoe. I'm guessing that how the lifting is taking place matters. I'm assuming a rock that rolled down a hill and is sitting cleanly on the ground.
Thanks for any help,
-Calvin
RE. the dealership - I'm not totally thrilled at this point - but it also seems tractor buying is a bit different than car buying, so trying to be reasonable... Further, they're literally 5 minutes (1.8 miles) from work - so I've decided to work with them unless they really tick me off. They are a larger dealership, they couldn't have been handed an easier sale, but I digress - trading convenience for proximity at this point.
I have a LOT of rocks on my property. I purchased the mechanical thumb for the backhoe so I can pick the reasonably sized ones up. I'm assuming "reasonably sized" would be limited to what fits into bucket. I started thinking and am now wondering what the weight limit for lifting would be for the for the current series BX23 backhoe. I'm guessing that how the lifting is taking place matters. I'm assuming a rock that rolled down a hill and is sitting cleanly on the ground.
Thanks for any help,
-Calvin
RE. the dealership - I'm not totally thrilled at this point - but it also seems tractor buying is a bit different than car buying, so trying to be reasonable... Further, they're literally 5 minutes (1.8 miles) from work - so I've decided to work with them unless they really tick me off. They are a larger dealership, they couldn't have been handed an easier sale, but I digress - trading convenience for proximity at this point.