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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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what new international do you recommend?

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WTA

08-13-2007 06:20:43




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I am a longtime farmall fan and have had several. I had a really nice super C that we were forced to sell this past winter to pay for another project. I have a super M LP tractor out back that I was going to restore and convert to gas but it had so much internal engine damage that I'm just going to use it for parts and find one that's already gas and running hopefully one of these days. I have a MM 4 star here too that came with the farm. It's an OK tractor but it sure takes a lot to keep it going and parts for it are very hard to get. I had to make some of the pieces I needed when I rebuilt the TA and PTO on it a couple weeks ago. Now the clutch is going bad and I just hope it gets through our wheat planting this month so I can split it after that.

What I am farming is 25 acres here. I have 4 pastures in giant bermuda and raise horses and cattle. I need a tractor that will handle any kind of haying equipment I might get for here and also a loader for all the other chores I keep having to borrow the neighbors Kubota for.

We also have another 100 acre farm a few hours away that I need to clear once again and get pastures and fence ready to go on. I'll be spending a lot of time logging that one before it's ready to move to again. I'll definitely need a loader there and 4 wheel drive.

So the tractor needs to be relatively light. I'd say under 9000 pounds so I don't tear up my truck transporting it, and it needs to have some power, around the 100 HP range.

I'm looking at the new JX 95 4 wheel drive with the 20 speed trans, air conditioned cab and all the other bells and whistles. Do ya'll think this would be a good choice? I just noticed McCormick has a few comparable ones online too but I don't know of any dealers around here that sell them. I'm stuck right in the middle of John Deere country and we only have one case dealer that I try to stay out of. They got me for 40 bucks for a oil filter on my super C once and I haven't forgotten it. Out east at the dealer I worked at they were only about 5 bucks. Anyway, what do you all think I should do for a tractor? I would love to find a super M now but I don't think one would do everything I would need it to do without some major modifications.

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GordoSD

08-13-2007 07:48:45




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 Re: what new international do you recommend? in reply to WTA, 08-13-2007 06:20:43  
I love the M series Kubota's also there;s one in my future. I wonder about your need for 100 hp though. Are you going to be pulling 22 feet of tillage? Disc chisel? For clearing, if you have a number of large trees , hire custom operator with large payloader. He can do in an hour what you can do in a day with a tractor. If it's brush and smaller trees you can do it easily with 70 hp.
Plus all you haying and planting. Dropping 20 hp is the fastest way to save $10,000.

Gordo

G

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RustyFarmall

08-13-2007 06:52:03




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 Re: what new international do you recommend? in reply to WTA, 08-13-2007 06:20:43  
You say you borrow your neighbors Kubota from time to time. Where did he buy it? If you have a reputable Kubota dealer in your area, you need to pay him a visit. There is no new tractor that is any better than the service you get from the dealer where you bought it. The local Case-IH dealer here also sells Kubotas. In the 100 horse power and under models, the Kubotas out sell the Case-IH tractors, and the customers are very happy.

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WTA

08-26-2007 09:45:57




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 Re: what new international do you recommend? in reply to RustyFarmall, 08-13-2007 06:52:03  
Well I got a new tractor and it was nowhere near what I thought I was going to get. It"s a new holland and I bought it local. It was from a new dealer here that was very nice and good on the price. I was just over there getting some parts for a old ford tractor I was working on and came home with a new tractor. It"s a 4x4 90 HP diesel with an air conditioned cab. I just love this thing!!!! I don"t even care that it"s not red. CNH is all one company anyway and it"s so similar to the international it"s unreal. it was about 10,000 cheaper though for the same thing basicly.

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WTA

08-13-2007 07:07:51




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 Re: what new international do you recommend? in reply to RustyFarmall, 08-13-2007 06:52:03  
Kubotas are good tractors. I worked at one of their dealers for a time after I retired from the Army. I loved working on them. That was out in PA though and smallish tractors had a lot bigger market out there. We sold at least one nearly every day. Out here all the tractor dealers are way higher than the ones out east so even if I have to drive 2000 miles I will probably be buying from out of state.

I had looked at their M9000 real hard for a while. It's one tough tractor. Honestly the only problem I ever had with them was removing the cab to split them. Those things use more bolts than they could ever need! I doubt if I bought a new one though that I would ever have to split it. Oh and they run the AC hoses through the A pillar around two sharp corners. I had to replace a lot of those hoses and it was not an easy job. I know they fixed that problem a long time ago though. Plus, I am so meticulous with my maintenance here that I doubt it would ever wear out. That JX 95 I was finding in the south and midsouth with a loader, cab, AC and 20 speed for around 33K on a new one. SOme were as high as 40. Here it's 41,000 without the loader. That adds another 8000 to 9000 to it.

Call me picky but If I can save a buck I will. That's actually a substantial difference though. I had the same problem in PA though. I've lived all over the world with 20 years in the Navy and Army and have a good feel for what things cost in different places. I actually used to rate cost of living in a country on the price of a budweiser. 7 dollars a can in Japan back in 85 to 25 cents a can in East Africa in 1990. You get the picture. This area is probably a 5 dollar a can place. In Pa my big gripe was the taxes. When the county we lived in was making plans to put a water meter on my well and charge me for my own water then passed a law requiring plates on my tractor and 4 wheeler we said enough is enough and moved out. Now down here I spend a small fortune irrigating so I don't know if I really won that one. Oh well. I do wish I could afford buying a new tractor here local but I doubt I can. Not if I can get it for 10,000 less somewhere else.

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