It’s only money. I try to be careful, but things happen. And I did finish clearing an old trail on the FIL’s property.My hood and brush guard on the little girl is not much different. I am sorry for the character lines.
It’s only money. I try to be careful, but things happen. And I did finish clearing an old trail on the FIL’s property.My hood and brush guard on the little girl is not much different. I am sorry for the character lines.
See above. The first one hurt, rest are battle scars.These tractors are tools and tools get damaged and worn, but still ... sorry to hear about that.
@Matt Ellerbee I think your machine is the hardest ridden on the forum, maybe a little battered today, but it is looking exceptionally clean!
I love that it came with a free toplink kills me!Caught a nice deal on this RCR1248. Used the backhoe to get it off the trailer, so that’s what I did with my kubota today. Looking forward to using it.
Thanks B737 for the local encouragement
Nah, I’m sure there are some rough ones here, maybe I’m just the only one that posts my oopsie moments!@Matt Ellerbee I think your machine is the hardest ridden on the forum, maybe a little battered today, but it is looking exceptionally clean!
I wasn't a member of this forum when I did $3,000 worth of damage to the BX. I had Kubota insurance and used it. It involved a very large maple tree trunk that I cut down and hauled off for an ex coworker. A large section rolled and smashed the front of the BX. New hood, new front grill, new lights, new exhaust muffler, and new stickers.Nah, I’m sure there are some rough ones here, maybe I’m just the only one that posts my oopsie moments!
It’s amazing how much just chipping it magically shrinks it and then how much faster it rots as a chip pile. We had probably three tractor trailer loads when we got the WC-68. Literally chipped away at it over quite a few days here and there until it was all in two chip piles. Gave away a half dozen pickup loads of chips to friends who wanted them for mulch and the rest rotted in two piles that the middle of was so hot they’d burn your hand in the dead of winter. Have fun cleaning up!Rigged up a red-neck rubber-tired tree mulcher…..in very small scale……
I literally could fill a tractor trailer with brush and downed trees. This is a start for small brush.
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Sorry, but having bent many things in, out, down, but very few things UP: how did you do that?My hood and brush guard on the little girl is not much different. I am sorry for the character lines.
I was was trying to save a trip hauling a overloaded bucket full of firewood up onto the porch…piece rolled off the top and dropped and the guard just perfect enough to release all the tension in the stamped welded brush guard and sprung into the hood…a million to one shot doc (fusilli jerry if you are a Seinfeld fan)I was just stupid…it’s that simple.Sorry, but having bent many things in, out, down, but very few things UP: how did you do that?
Better the hood than the head is what I say. Have a nice large dent in my B2410 hood, no idea how it got there either. Thats the only damage in 20 years though, so I can live with it.Had a tree in the grapple, was hanging all over the place, rear tire ran over the top and smacked the hood before I could stop it.
Exactly. I should have stopped, dropped and repicked up the tree, but I was glad to have a hold of it after ripping it out.Better the hood than the head is what I say. Have a nice large dent in my B2410 hood, no idea how it got there either. Thats the only damage in 20 years though, so I can live with it.
We need pictures of thisToday I strapped my backpack blower into my BX bucket and proceeded to blow sticks and winter debris off of part of my grass…getting ready for mowing next week with the new Kubota ZT
Didn’t think of pics…all done now. Not hard to imagine though…set blower on bucket, secure with ratchet strap, secure nozzle in an applicable direction, and BLOW! Of course had to get off the seat and start the blower first…We need pictures of this