Apologies for the long post, but I'm trying to answer questions you might ask.
This is one of those am-I-buying-the-right-thing questions. I’m not new to tractor ownership – I owned a Deere 850 for quite a few years – but I’ve never owned a SCUT and not anything from this century. My use case in those days was way different.
Intended uses and non-uses:
This is one of those am-I-buying-the-right-thing questions. I’m not new to tractor ownership – I owned a Deere 850 for quite a few years – but I’ve never owned a SCUT and not anything from this century. My use case in those days was way different.
Intended uses and non-uses:
- Property maintenance on and around my 1-acre yard and 2 acres of hilly woods.
- Heavy-duty landscaping of ½ acre of scrubby brush and rocks. Building a stone wall is part of the dream.
- Moving stuff like firewood, stones (100#-200#), topsoil and mulch. My back does not appreciate lifting anymore.
- Light work in rough woods, mostly moving brush and snaking logs out from time to time.
- Not mowing. The lawn isn’t suitable for a tractor mower due to grade and small, irregular corners. (I could probably do it, but at best it isn't a priority.)
- Not a backhoe. Though it would be useful for a few things, when I need one, I can rent an excavator locally and do far more. (I borrowed a New Holland Boomer TC29D for a while, and its backhoe couldn’t do most of what I tried.)
- Not brush-hogging.
- Kubota, but you probably guessed that already. A big reason is that I like the local Kubota dealer. They have a good reputation, and I want to deal with a family-owned business, not a mammoth chain.
- I’m buying new. I almost never do, but I’m at a stage of life where I own an aging house, lots of older equipment, etc., and I’m tired of fixing things. I just want to use the tractor and do routine service. I don’t want to have to repair it. (Fingers crossed I get a good one, unlike my F-150.)
- Four-wheel drive. Parts of the woods are soft.
- No snowblower. I live in northern Vermont where we (used to) get a lot of snow. :-/ However, a walk-behind snowblower does all I need. Last winter, I didn’t even need that.
- Probably a B2601HSD. A lot of what I want could be done with a BX, but I think the extra ground clearance of the B series will pay off in the woods. (B2601 clears the ground by 12.8", BX2680 is 8.9".)
- I could be convinced to go BX, if it seems like it would be enough tractor.
- Attachments: FEL.
- Things I don’t think I need but could use: Grapple, snowblower.
- Things I definitely don’t need: Mower, backhoe, brush hog.
- For resale, I would like a subsequent owner to be able to add any of these attachments. Realistically, I won’t own this for very many years. (Statistically, I won't be ALIVE very many more years.) The B2301 and B2601 come with mid PTO, which I believe is required for MM mowers and maybe snowblowers.
- Is this the right level of tractor for this work? I know nobody ever complained that their tractor was too powerful, but the bigger the tractor, the less maneuverable it is in the woods. (Strangely, the turning radius of the B2601 seems to be less than the BX2680.)
- Should I consider BX?
- Would the B2601 provide better traction in the woods than a BX? I've taken a rented BX into these woods, and it acted like it wanted to get stuck there.
- What kind of tires? It will be going back and forth over my terrible lawn, and I don’t want to make it worse.