what single machine for a rural property.
what single machine for a rural property.
Author
Discussion

RyanDD

Original Poster:

96 posts

178 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
I put it to you, what single machine would be the most useful for a rural property?

For those inclined to read the whole post here are some more details.
12 acres, fairly flat grassland, self build home on the cards in the coming years and a garage build too.

I have access to a tractor from the family members, but its not mine and often in use at the times I would like to get a job done. It can do the agri work like mowing of the pastures and crop sewing/ harvesting.

Im looking for a general material shifter, snow clearer, trailer tow-er and other odd jobs.

Budget is 15- 20k , which is firmly in the second hand market for a name brand or a new Chinese machine.
Id like a useful front loader/ arm and a cab to keep me out of the weather.

Ive looked at mini diggers, they are great for the landscaping and trenching, but not so good at popping down the road to get a load of stones from the neighbours farm.

Mini tractors like a New Holland Boomer or T3 series, could work, but i haven't seen any with substantial front loader capability, which would would be useful unloading pallets and lifting materials to top of scaffolding for roofing. The 3 point hitch and pto make the rear of the machine very useful. It would be overlapping capability with the tractor that is available , albeit that doesn't have a front a loader

I went looking at front loaders and the MAAC Mangusta with the rear 3 point hitch and PTO seems like the perfect machine, but its 3-4x my budget.

The more accessible machines would be an Avant 530 with a cab and rear hitch. It has a good lift height and front loader capacity at the expense of not doing much with the rear end.


Im looking at machines in the 2-3 Tonne range in terms of operating weight/ kerb weight

Have I been too quick to rule out mini tractors with a 300kg lift capacity and 2m lift height front loader?

What would you buy?

Sorry for formatting, it is significantly harder on mobile than I expected.

Having never owned a hydraulic machine before I'm fresh to all this and really don't want to buy a machine that need a repair on every use.

Peter911

593 posts

184 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
Used 50hp tractor with front loader then loads of attachments to suit.

I have older David Browns, so don’t devalue either, but something from Kubota should do the trick.

Go to a farm dispersal auction or two.

was8v

2,012 posts

222 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
Mx5?

ChrisH72

3,006 posts

79 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
was8v said:
Mx5?
Hehe, at first I was thinking GR Yaris from the thread title. Then when I started reading it changed to something like a Ford Ranger like the one my cousin uses on his farm land in Scotland.

But proper agricultural stuff I'm afraid I have no experience with.

Super Sonic

13,687 posts

81 months

Friday 10th November 2023
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You should be able to get a unimog for 20k, which you can also drive to Sainsbury's.

biggbn

31,684 posts

247 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
was8v said:
Mx5?
smile

Desiderata

2,738 posts

81 months

Friday 10th November 2023
quotequote all
As already said by others, an older 50ish hp tractor with a loader should do everything you need on the land but don't forget about the cost of all the implements, trailers etc they'll probably add up to more than the tractor.
It will be little or no use however for building a house. You'll need a digger of some sort (whether a JCB 3x type or a mini 360° excavator) . Personally I'd buy a mid sized second hand excavator (the little 1.5-1.8 ton ones are harder to find than slightly bigger because every man and his dog wants one to drag about behind his Hilux) and a cheap dumper, then sell them and buy your tractor when building is finished.
It sounds like a good idea, but you really won't find one machine that will do it all.

RyanDD

Original Poster:

96 posts

178 months

Saturday 11th November 2023
quotequote all
Cheers for the replies,

John Deere do a nice MX-5.

Point taken about the extra cost of attachments, but they can dribble in as and when.

I'll keep my eyes out for a 50hp ish tractor

Desiderata

2,738 posts

81 months

Saturday 11th November 2023
quotequote all
RyanDD said:
Point taken about the extra cost of attachments, but they can dribble in as and when.
We've got just short of 20 acres and I get away with using a 73 year old 30hp grey fergie that I paid £1200 for. The jobs I have for it are exactly what it was designed for all these years ago. I'm pretty stingy, but so far I've spent £500 on a trailer, £400 on a mower, £300 on a plough, managed to get a rotovator for free, and have been looking at bailers and hay turners for a couple of hundred each.


RyanDD

Original Poster:

96 posts

178 months

Sunday 12th November 2023
quotequote all
Thats a great machine for you and sounds like a wallet friendly way to get the jobs done.

RyanDD

Original Poster:

96 posts

178 months

Monday 27th November 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for all the help
I have picked up this Kubota L4200 from 1999 with front loader and back actor.



There are a few things to tidy up on it, but overall it is in reasonable condition.

Mammasaid

5,444 posts

124 months

Monday 27th November 2023
quotequote all
Nice, we run a ME9000 (alongside 2 MFs, a 35 & 135).

Check your hoses and hydraulic oil, they won't be cheap to fix if they split, especially if you're mid doing something.

It looks to have grass tyres on it, you might want to put some more aggressive ones on so not to get stuck!