CaveCreekRay
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L3800 HST, KingKutter box scraper, KingKutter 66" rake, County Pride Subsoiler
Grab a cup of coffee. This will take awhile…
Last year, I bought a 24 year-old 5-acre horse ranch. The place needed kaboodles of remodeling. For starters, we had to rip out 20,000 lbs of Saltillo tile from the house floor and get that tile up, into the dumpster. We had to have a tractor just for the tile. With it projected to take six to eight days of jackhammering, renting a tractor was out of the question.
Getting my wife to swing for a new tractor was easy because of the tasks ahead. And the “sell” would go a lot easier if my wife could operate the tractor while I spotted her loads.
We had owned an ancient Ford F-1700 with a loader twenty years ago and found the utility of a tractor to be most handy during landscaping. Only problem was, my wife is “allergic” to manual transmissions so she ended up “rassling” with the 500 lb boulder coming out of the bucket I was lowering. No surprise, that wasn’t a popular idea this time around.
We spent a bunch of time looking for a L 3800 like my best friend has out in Ohio. Used Kubota’s are hard to come by! Plus, we were now limited to HST (hydrostatic) so my wife could drive it. That narrowed the field even more. (See my “HYDROSTATIC STORY” for good info if you are deciding to go hydro or manual…)
My wife found a Craigslist ad for a tractor about two hours north of Phoenix. The guy mentioned the tractor had a “little dent on the hood” but he would never send me any pictures of the damage. After a month, he still had the tractor and I needed one, so I headed up to see it. When I got out of the truck, I couldn’t help laughing out loud. It was horrible…
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubotahood.jpg.html][/URL]
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/KubotaHood-4.jpg.html][/URL]
This L 3800 had 126 hours on the clock. During a lifting operation, he accidentally lifted a mobile home axle to the top limits of the loader height and, as you might imagine, the axle came over the back of the bucket, striking the hood and then the roof. Had the roof not been installed, it is very likely he would have been seriously injured –or worse.
Fortunately, the damage was limited to the hood and the fiberglass roof. In parts alone, he said the damage came to a little over a grand, so we worked out a deal and I drove away with a 8 month old Kubota with a serious dent in its nose, and three implements.
With a remodel underway I didn’t have time to fiddle with the “cosmetics” of the damage. I pulled the hood and we christened our new orange helper the “Ghetto Kubota.” After months of use, I found that engine access was pretty handy without the hood. But, I longed to get the hood done, every time I saw it sitting in the barn.
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubota-Lou-3.jpg.html][/URL]
My wife took to the hydrostatic transmission like a duck to water. When I would fill up the bucket with shattered floor tile, she would gleefully drive out and dump the load in the dumpster. After the first couple tries, I never had to ask twice to get her on the tractor. She loves this thing. And, this is a woman who took years to get the confidence necessary to ride a motorcycle. This tractor was easy!
When it came time to set new manhole covers over our new septic system, the contractor wanted $1000 to set two covers and the concrete collars. Instead, we bought some chain and a couple bags of mortar and set them both in 30 minutes. My wife did all the heavy lifting and delivering. I put her in low range and about 1500 rpm so she could make a mistake and not go far. She didn’t make many after the first couple. She liked being on the driving end of “heavy lifting” for a change. (I think I am the permanent spotter from now on… )
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/EchoCanyon-SepticTank-4.jpg.html][/URL]
Ten months later, with the remodel winding down, I finally got around to fixing up our crunched machine.
Right after purchasing the tractor, I contacted the local dealer about parts. A new hood, minus stickers was $770. The lights housings were $150 apiece. Stickers ran about $60. Paint, in rattle cans, ran me $10.80 apiece. I gulped hard on the new hood and then got an idea: Could an auto body expert do the sheet metal repair? I took it down to my local guy and he said they’d give it a try. Boy, was I lucky!
The awesome Hispanic body guy beat and hammered and welded and sanded over and over for four days and got it back into shape. He was a true craftsman. The dent was so bad it had stretched the upper hood surface. If you’ll look, there was also a seam that was bent pretty bad. This guy was a true artist and the whole job ran me $350 to get to here. I am totally proud of this guys workmanship on my tractor. He saved it.
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubotahood-3-2.jpg.html][/URL]
It only took a little more sanding on my part and I was ready for primer. My Ohio Kubota buddy is an experienced car restorer and he advised me the proper primer paint color under orange needed to be very light gray or white. Mine was not quite “light gray” so I just sprayed on more Kubota II Orange.
Last year, I bought a 24 year-old 5-acre horse ranch. The place needed kaboodles of remodeling. For starters, we had to rip out 20,000 lbs of Saltillo tile from the house floor and get that tile up, into the dumpster. We had to have a tractor just for the tile. With it projected to take six to eight days of jackhammering, renting a tractor was out of the question.
Getting my wife to swing for a new tractor was easy because of the tasks ahead. And the “sell” would go a lot easier if my wife could operate the tractor while I spotted her loads.
We had owned an ancient Ford F-1700 with a loader twenty years ago and found the utility of a tractor to be most handy during landscaping. Only problem was, my wife is “allergic” to manual transmissions so she ended up “rassling” with the 500 lb boulder coming out of the bucket I was lowering. No surprise, that wasn’t a popular idea this time around.
We spent a bunch of time looking for a L 3800 like my best friend has out in Ohio. Used Kubota’s are hard to come by! Plus, we were now limited to HST (hydrostatic) so my wife could drive it. That narrowed the field even more. (See my “HYDROSTATIC STORY” for good info if you are deciding to go hydro or manual…)
My wife found a Craigslist ad for a tractor about two hours north of Phoenix. The guy mentioned the tractor had a “little dent on the hood” but he would never send me any pictures of the damage. After a month, he still had the tractor and I needed one, so I headed up to see it. When I got out of the truck, I couldn’t help laughing out loud. It was horrible…
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubotahood.jpg.html][/URL]
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/KubotaHood-4.jpg.html][/URL]
This L 3800 had 126 hours on the clock. During a lifting operation, he accidentally lifted a mobile home axle to the top limits of the loader height and, as you might imagine, the axle came over the back of the bucket, striking the hood and then the roof. Had the roof not been installed, it is very likely he would have been seriously injured –or worse.
Fortunately, the damage was limited to the hood and the fiberglass roof. In parts alone, he said the damage came to a little over a grand, so we worked out a deal and I drove away with a 8 month old Kubota with a serious dent in its nose, and three implements.
With a remodel underway I didn’t have time to fiddle with the “cosmetics” of the damage. I pulled the hood and we christened our new orange helper the “Ghetto Kubota.” After months of use, I found that engine access was pretty handy without the hood. But, I longed to get the hood done, every time I saw it sitting in the barn.
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubota-Lou-3.jpg.html][/URL]
My wife took to the hydrostatic transmission like a duck to water. When I would fill up the bucket with shattered floor tile, she would gleefully drive out and dump the load in the dumpster. After the first couple tries, I never had to ask twice to get her on the tractor. She loves this thing. And, this is a woman who took years to get the confidence necessary to ride a motorcycle. This tractor was easy!
When it came time to set new manhole covers over our new septic system, the contractor wanted $1000 to set two covers and the concrete collars. Instead, we bought some chain and a couple bags of mortar and set them both in 30 minutes. My wife did all the heavy lifting and delivering. I put her in low range and about 1500 rpm so she could make a mistake and not go far. She didn’t make many after the first couple. She liked being on the driving end of “heavy lifting” for a change. (I think I am the permanent spotter from now on… )
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/EchoCanyon-SepticTank-4.jpg.html][/URL]
Ten months later, with the remodel winding down, I finally got around to fixing up our crunched machine.
Right after purchasing the tractor, I contacted the local dealer about parts. A new hood, minus stickers was $770. The lights housings were $150 apiece. Stickers ran about $60. Paint, in rattle cans, ran me $10.80 apiece. I gulped hard on the new hood and then got an idea: Could an auto body expert do the sheet metal repair? I took it down to my local guy and he said they’d give it a try. Boy, was I lucky!
The awesome Hispanic body guy beat and hammered and welded and sanded over and over for four days and got it back into shape. He was a true craftsman. The dent was so bad it had stretched the upper hood surface. If you’ll look, there was also a seam that was bent pretty bad. This guy was a true artist and the whole job ran me $350 to get to here. I am totally proud of this guys workmanship on my tractor. He saved it.
http://[URL=http://s307.photobucket.com/user/CaptStark/media/Kubotahood-3-2.jpg.html][/URL]
It only took a little more sanding on my part and I was ready for primer. My Ohio Kubota buddy is an experienced car restorer and he advised me the proper primer paint color under orange needed to be very light gray or white. Mine was not quite “light gray” so I just sprayed on more Kubota II Orange.
Last edited: