I just got my L5740. Tires are loaded with CaCl, which I was told had leaked and been cleaned up. Turns out this was not the case--they are still leaking. I'm taking it to the tire place on Monday to get rim cleaned up and new tubes. Nobody here (within 50 miles) does "beet juice", and the reccomendation of the tire guy I trust was to but the CaCL back in if I need the ballast. He does not do ethanol but I have not looked into other places in town. Searching the 'net implies guys either love or hate the CaCl, with not much middle ground.
I'm coming from a 5 ton (ballasted JD 3020) to a 2 ton tractor, and assumed I needed the tires loaded. I currently don't use my loader (will be a LA 854) all that much. Main tractor tasks are box blading and using a rear-mounted snowblower. If I use the loader for gravel I normally have a (not very heavy) box-blade on the back and if I use it for snow I've got a heavy snowblower on the back. I may occasionally use the loader to move a tree stump or something without a weight on the back (unless I need one, in which case I can put ballast on the 3 pt). I will probably use the loader more on the more nimble 5740, and I will probably use this tractor with a rear mounted mower (I have a 6 ft mower) and may eventually plow and/or rototil a small garden (100 ft by 50 ft, a garden, not a field). I also may get pallet forks in the distant future. (I don't have plow/tiller/forks so these are future possibilities).
So, how much ballast do I need and what's the best way to get it? The rims are already damaged, so I'm not looking at putting CaCl into new rims. Wheel weights are over a grand for around 1000 pounds (and I'm not sure how much wider they will make the tractor). OTOH, it's going to cost north of $500 to get the new tubes and rims cleaned up. I'm guessing there's not a huge market for used weights for a tractor that new?
Do I need one or the other, or both? Would I want to be able to have less weight while (for example) mowing (so be able to take the wheel weights off)? I have ag tires, no hills (but a steep ditch I might try to mow if I thought it was safe--I chicken out on my Ford but a neighbor mows it with a sketchier setup than mine). I can make a ballast box/barrel-o-cement for the times I need more, but loaded tires, followed by wheel weights seems like they'd be less wear-and-tear on the tractor.
Sorry for the long post, thanks for wading through it, and please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks,
I'm coming from a 5 ton (ballasted JD 3020) to a 2 ton tractor, and assumed I needed the tires loaded. I currently don't use my loader (will be a LA 854) all that much. Main tractor tasks are box blading and using a rear-mounted snowblower. If I use the loader for gravel I normally have a (not very heavy) box-blade on the back and if I use it for snow I've got a heavy snowblower on the back. I may occasionally use the loader to move a tree stump or something without a weight on the back (unless I need one, in which case I can put ballast on the 3 pt). I will probably use the loader more on the more nimble 5740, and I will probably use this tractor with a rear mounted mower (I have a 6 ft mower) and may eventually plow and/or rototil a small garden (100 ft by 50 ft, a garden, not a field). I also may get pallet forks in the distant future. (I don't have plow/tiller/forks so these are future possibilities).
So, how much ballast do I need and what's the best way to get it? The rims are already damaged, so I'm not looking at putting CaCl into new rims. Wheel weights are over a grand for around 1000 pounds (and I'm not sure how much wider they will make the tractor). OTOH, it's going to cost north of $500 to get the new tubes and rims cleaned up. I'm guessing there's not a huge market for used weights for a tractor that new?
Do I need one or the other, or both? Would I want to be able to have less weight while (for example) mowing (so be able to take the wheel weights off)? I have ag tires, no hills (but a steep ditch I might try to mow if I thought it was safe--I chicken out on my Ford but a neighbor mows it with a sketchier setup than mine). I can make a ballast box/barrel-o-cement for the times I need more, but loaded tires, followed by wheel weights seems like they'd be less wear-and-tear on the tractor.
Sorry for the long post, thanks for wading through it, and please let me know your thoughts.
Thanks,