First Tractor - New (to me!!) L2501DT

MyakkaCodeOrange

New member

Equipment
L2501DT
Oct 15, 2023
21
19
3
Southwest Florida
First, thanks to all of the members posting answers to my previous thread “Need advice on buying L3301DT first tractor”. The insight and experience helped, especially pointing out that there really isn’t that much difference in power & usability between say the L3302 and the L2502 / L2501 (or even say the L3902 considering the same size/weight frame). As I did not want to spend the money to step up to larger unit… and I just couldn’t stomach paying ~$27K for a new unit (more with sales tax), I bought a lightly (43 hour) used 2016 L2501 in Oklahoma and dragged it to FL. (On the way home from an epic family road trip). Even with trailer rental, gas and rigging— still half price of a new one. So far, runs great and everything works!

here’s a few pics:
IMG_1684.jpeg


IMG_1681.jpeg
 
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MyakkaCodeOrange

New member

Equipment
L2501DT
Oct 15, 2023
21
19
3
Southwest Florida
Here’s the tow rig
IMG_1680.jpeg


Ran 1,500 miles with bed fully loaded with clothes/gear, (2) kids, me, wife and tractor, no problems! Other than 10mpg mileage, barely noticed trailer.
 
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Hkb82

Well-known member

Equipment
M7060, Ford 5600, can-am defender
Nov 17, 2021
387
312
63
42
Ontario Canada
Nice looking rig and tractor looks like a beauty. Enjoy your seat time on that thing.
 
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Rdrcr

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L2501 w/ S2T Turbo Kit = 35 PTO HP (Current), B2601 (Sold)
May 7, 2021
671
738
93
WA
Congratulations! Great choice!
You’re gonna really enjoy the L2501!

Mike
 

skeets

Well-known member

Equipment
BX 2360 /B2601
Oct 2, 2009
14,558
3,309
113
SW Pa
Way cool, now being your first tractor a couple words of advice.
1 Think everything through, what might go wrong, or will.

2 Remember it is a middle sized tractor, not a 988, it will anything you want just take your time.

3 And this is the most important thing to remember,,,,,,,
Never and I mean NEVER let you better half on it!
When you are using the beasty keep a bottle of water with you and splash your self like you been just workin your butt off.
And like I said if you DO let her on,,,,,, well son you might just be looking for another tractor for your self :)
Enjoy you self, be safe ,and welcome to the orange
 
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trial and error

Well-known member

Equipment
B7100dt manual trans. homemade FEL, 4 way hydraulic dozer blade
Feb 16, 2023
396
388
63
NY
You done good. That's seems like am awesome deal.
 

PaulL

Well-known member

Equipment
B2601
Jul 17, 2017
2,441
1,365
113
NZ
You'll love it. My usual first tractor tips:

1. Anything the tractor touches, the tractor breaks. Keep away from the house and landscaping, and learn to watch the swing on the back with implements, and the swing on the front with the loader

2. Tractors are really tippy. They're stable, but tippy. What does this mean?
  • You can tip it over on flat ground if you have the loader up in the air and turn sharp
  • The front wheels provide no stability (they're on a pivot). The rear wheels are what keep you level. If you don't ballast properly you end up with a very light rear, and a light rear is a tippy tractor
  • With a load out the front on the loader, and a weight on the back like a brush hog, you've got a big pendulum around the front and rear wheels. They bounce and pitch like nobodies business. If you don't like that, work to avoid so much weight out front and rear (take the loader off, use a flail mower instead of a brush hog)
  • Speed makes them less stable. Things that are safe slow can get dangerous fast. Holes or bumps can tip you over, turning sharp is much more of a problem fast
3. Watch out for family members. Don't be like my father, who claimed it was my job to stay clear of the machinery he was using. If someone gets hurt you'll never forgive yourself. It doesn't hurt to go slow

4. Grease is important. Learn where every zerk is and hit all of them often. Too much is better than too little. Loader in particular, and also spindles on your mower and chipper. Doesn't matter what sort of grease really, matters that you use it

5. Stay on top of fluids. Hydro fluid, oil changes, filters.

6. Gunk in your tank makes a lot of work to strip and clean. Easier to make sure your fuel is clean and has an algaecide, and put a strainer in the neck of your filler (you can find links on here to cheap ones). Lots of threads of people saying "my tractor's not running well" and answers of "pull off the fuel tank and clean the whole fuel system". It's not much fun, prevention is better than cure

7. Chains are good. If you don't like scratched paint on your buckets, chain hooks are also good. I've never got some myself, but I want them.

8. Forks or a grapple. Carryall for the back. Replace the tool box with something bigger so you can carry more stuff.

9. You can get cheap ATV fertiliser spreaders (I think I recall you trying to grow grass on Florida sand), and cheap ATV sprayers. Easy to weld a 3pt frame for them, and easy to run a wire with a switch on the dash. If you're growing grass you'll want to fertilise and to spray.

10. Cheap to get a rattle can of Kubota orange. I sand and spray the bits that I scratch reasonably often. It'll get scratched, it doesn't have to rust.
 
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Runs With Scissors

Well-known member

Equipment
L2501 TLB , Grappel, Brush Hog, Box Blade, Ballast box, Forks, Tiller, PH digger
Jan 25, 2023
2,437
2,816
113
Michigan
Wow man, thats a sweet machine.

It sure looks nicer than what I expected from your original description. I think you got a great deal.

The only thing I'll add is this;

There is a grease zerk on the bottom of the tractor near the middle, that is basically a "Grease Black Hole".

I can't recall the name right now, but its a long tube that has a zerk. You'll know it when you see it..

..No grease ever squirts out of it, I must have pumped an entire tube into it the first time I greased it. A few pumps is all it takes.

Enjoy!
 
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PaulL

Well-known member

Equipment
B2601
Jul 17, 2017
2,441
1,365
113
NZ
By the way, I thought you said it had Ag tires on it. Those are R4s, which are pretty much ideal for your terrain.
 
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bbxlr8

Active member

Equipment
L2501 w/R14s, LA525, BH77, SGC0660, CL 5' BB, CL PHD, WG24 + Ford 1210 60" mmm,
Mar 29, 2021
384
246
43
Eastern PA
Congratulations! It was the Goldilocks one for me and no regrets in 2.5Y

I am very encouraged that there are good deals out there again. I would have liked to buy used but it was smack in the middle of covid/supply chain snafu and I can assure you that there were none to be found then at less than new $. In fact, I was very lucky to have gotten mine in short order with the equipment I wanted and a "fair" deal on the total & good financing.

Keep us posted as I am sure you will be adding "stuff" - Beware it happens quick :p
 
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MyakkaCodeOrange

New member

Equipment
L2501DT
Oct 15, 2023
21
19
3
Southwest Florida
You'll love it. My usual first tractor tips:

1. Anything the tractor touches, the tractor breaks. Keep away from the house and landscaping, and learn to watch the swing on the back with implements, and the swing on the front with the loader

2. Tractors are really tippy. They're stable, but tippy. What does this mean?
  • You can tip it over on flat ground if you have the loader up in the air and turn sharp
  • The front wheels provide no stability (they're on a pivot). The rear wheels are what keep you level. If you don't ballast properly you end up with a very light rear, and a light rear is a tippy tractor
  • With a load out the front on the loader, and a weight on the back like a brush hog, you've got a big pendulum around the front and rear wheels. They bounce and pitch like nobodies business. If you don't like that, work to avoid so much weight out front and rear (take the loader off, use a flail mower instead of a brush hog)
  • Speed makes them less stable. Things that are safe slow can get dangerous fast. Holes or bumps can tip you over, turning sharp is much more of a problem fast
3. Watch out for family members. Don't be like my father, who claimed it was my job to stay clear of the machinery he was using. If someone gets hurt you'll never forgive yourself. It doesn't hurt to go slow

4. Grease is important. Learn where every zerk is and hit all of them often. Too much is better than too little. Loader in particular, and also spindles on your mower and chipper. Doesn't matter what sort of grease really, matters that you use it

5. Stay on top of fluids. Hydro fluid, oil changes, filters.

6. Gunk in your tank makes a lot of work to strip and clean. Easier to make sure your fuel is clean and has an algaecide, and put a strainer in the neck of your filler (you can find links on here to cheap ones). Lots of threads of people saying "my tractor's not running well" and answers of "pull off the fuel tank and clean the whole fuel system". It's not much fun, prevention is better than cure

7. Chains are good. If you don't like scratched paint on your buckets, chain hooks are also good. I've never got some myself, but I want them.

8. Forks or a grapple. Carryall for the back. Replace the tool box with something bigger so you can carry more stuff.

9. You can get cheap ATV fertiliser spreaders (I think I recall you trying to grow grass on Florida sand), and cheap ATV sprayers. Easy to weld a 3pt frame for them, and easy to run a wire with a switch on the dash. If you're growing grass you'll want to fertilise and to spray.

10. Cheap to get a rattle can of Kubota orange. I sand and spray the bits that I scratch reasonably often. It'll get scratched, it doesn't have to rust.
all GREAT advice.
 

MyakkaCodeOrange

New member

Equipment
L2501DT
Oct 15, 2023
21
19
3
Southwest Florida
By the way, I thought you said it had Ag tires on it. Those are R4s, which are pretty much ideal for your terrain.
yeah I was all over place — in addition to looking for used, I was looking at new “cheap” package deals which being “cheap” usually had Ag tires.

Side note— I have already discovered the limits of traction & digging just practicing with the loader on a small compost pile. It lost traction very easily. It’s super dry here hasn’t rained in maybe two weeks. However the tires are not filled and there’s no rear implement, and it does not have a cutting edge. So I am thinking adding tire ballast, cutting edge and heavy box blade will help.
 
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MyakkaCodeOrange

New member

Equipment
L2501DT
Oct 15, 2023
21
19
3
Southwest Florida
Congratulations! It was the Goldilocks one for me and no regrets in 2.5Y

I am very encouraged that there are good deals out there again. I would have liked to buy used but it was smack in the middle of covid/supply chain snafu and I can assure you that there were none to be found then at less than new $. In fact, I was very lucky to have gotten mine in short order with the equipment I wanted and a "fair" deal on the total & good financing.

Keep us posted as I am sure you will be adding "stuff" - Beware it happens quick :p
You bet. Whether it’s a car or truck or boat or house … or tractor… I just can’t leave it the way I found it. Already shopping for accessories.
 

trial and error

Well-known member

Equipment
B7100dt manual trans. homemade FEL, 4 way hydraulic dozer blade
Feb 16, 2023
396
388
63
NY
yeah I was all over place — in addition to looking for used, I was looking at new “cheap” package deals which being “cheap” usually had Ag tires.

Side note— I have already discovered the limits of traction & digging just practicing with the loader on a small compost pile. It lost traction very easily. It’s super dry here hasn’t rained in maybe two weeks. However the tires are not filled and there’s no rear implement, and it does not have a cutting edge. So I am thinking adding tire ballast, cutting edge and heavy box blade will help.
Ballast of any kind will be your freind
 
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PaulL

Well-known member

Equipment
B2601
Jul 17, 2017
2,441
1,365
113
NZ
yeah I was all over place — in addition to looking for used, I was looking at new “cheap” package deals which being “cheap” usually had Ag tires.

Side note— I have already discovered the limits of traction & digging just practicing with the loader on a small compost pile. It lost traction very easily. It’s super dry here hasn’t rained in maybe two weeks. However the tires are not filled and there’s no rear implement, and it does not have a cutting edge. So I am thinking adding tire ballast, cutting edge and heavy box blade will help.
I'm personally not a fan of tire ballast. Once in, you can't take it out again. There are other ways to ballast a tractor.
 

skeets

Well-known member

Equipment
BX 2360 /B2601
Oct 2, 2009
14,558
3,309
113
SW Pa
Ahhh my friend ,tire blast comes out easy,,, jack er up rotate the tire to 6 o'clock pull the tire valve stem and stand back or run over something real sharp and see how fast it comes out. Now if you are talking about foam filled, yeah your screwed
 

Donystoy

Active member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
LX2610HSDCC, B/H, Loader, plus numerous other attachments. B7200 sold
Dec 10, 2013
566
217
43
Binbrook, Ontario
I only use rear attachments or a ballast box for weight as I want to be easy on the front axle. This also makes it easier to trailer.
That is one nice tractor for the money and hours. Unless the original purchaser's situation changed, I wonder why they bought the tractor in the first place if they hardly used it. I think I seldom use mine and I still put at least 100 hours a year on it.