mcmxi
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
***Current*** M6060HDC, MX6000HSTC & GL7000 ***Sold*** MX6000HST & BX25DLB
I think it could be interesting to start a thread about the John Deere plow that I bought this week in case anyone else is interested in buying an old piece of equipment, fixing it up and using it. I don't farm for a living, don't intend or need to make money from plowing, and probably won't plow more than 10 to 20 acres twice a year. So the point of this thread is to document repairing, replacing, upgrading and using what appears to be a 60+ year-old plow.
So why a plow? Well, after spending 16 or more hours cutting a friend's 10+ acres of weeds a few weekends ago, we had a conversation along the lines of "we should grow something here that will be good for bees (my friend has bee hives), will provide habitat for upland birds, that could be a food source for deer, that will help keep weeds down, and that might even produce a crop to consume or sell". After that conversation I started looking at new plows, and specifically two and three bottom turnover plows that are more efficient than the fixed type. Do I need a plow to help out my friend, maybe, maybe not, but it sure would be fun to get a 60 year old plow working again, do some tillage, learn a new skill and have some tractor fun along the way.
After requesting a quote on a very nice and very modern three bottom turnover plow from Kuhn, and being told that it would be $28,000 for the base model, I decided that I should find something way cheaper, and something that would work well enough for my twice yearly "plow day". Something that I could pull behind the M6060 when needed, but something that will sit idle for 363 days a year.
As it turns out, the place that quoted me for the Kuhn also sells various used and new implements and farm equipment and they happened to have both a three bottom and a four bottom turnover plow made by John Deere. So off I went, and after looking at both, thinking that the four bottom looked way too big and heavy (Kubota states that the M6060 is rated for a 14" three bottom) and seeing some significant and poorly executed repairs on the four bottom, decided to buy the three bottom. I knew right away that the hoses were junk, but they're cheap enough so I wasn't overly concerned. The plow appeared to be complete to my untrained eye with the exception of not having any coulters, and there was one repair and subsequent failure made to a fairly small bracket/brace that I can take care of.
Things I didn't know included whether or not the vane type rotary cylinder worked (rotates the plow bottoms) or whether or not as it sat would it do a decent job of turning over a relatively stone-free field.
Running total:
John Deere three bottom turnover plow - $1,200
Pole Creek Supply Co. in St. Ignatius, MT and loading up the plow for the 80 mile trip home.
So why a plow? Well, after spending 16 or more hours cutting a friend's 10+ acres of weeds a few weekends ago, we had a conversation along the lines of "we should grow something here that will be good for bees (my friend has bee hives), will provide habitat for upland birds, that could be a food source for deer, that will help keep weeds down, and that might even produce a crop to consume or sell". After that conversation I started looking at new plows, and specifically two and three bottom turnover plows that are more efficient than the fixed type. Do I need a plow to help out my friend, maybe, maybe not, but it sure would be fun to get a 60 year old plow working again, do some tillage, learn a new skill and have some tractor fun along the way.
After requesting a quote on a very nice and very modern three bottom turnover plow from Kuhn, and being told that it would be $28,000 for the base model, I decided that I should find something way cheaper, and something that would work well enough for my twice yearly "plow day". Something that I could pull behind the M6060 when needed, but something that will sit idle for 363 days a year.
As it turns out, the place that quoted me for the Kuhn also sells various used and new implements and farm equipment and they happened to have both a three bottom and a four bottom turnover plow made by John Deere. So off I went, and after looking at both, thinking that the four bottom looked way too big and heavy (Kubota states that the M6060 is rated for a 14" three bottom) and seeing some significant and poorly executed repairs on the four bottom, decided to buy the three bottom. I knew right away that the hoses were junk, but they're cheap enough so I wasn't overly concerned. The plow appeared to be complete to my untrained eye with the exception of not having any coulters, and there was one repair and subsequent failure made to a fairly small bracket/brace that I can take care of.
Things I didn't know included whether or not the vane type rotary cylinder worked (rotates the plow bottoms) or whether or not as it sat would it do a decent job of turning over a relatively stone-free field.
Running total:
John Deere three bottom turnover plow - $1,200
Pole Creek Supply Co. in St. Ignatius, MT and loading up the plow for the 80 mile trip home.
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