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Getting ready for fall is NEVER easy...

farmerjohn

Gold $$ Contributor
Power line and pipe line cross making a perfect X in the center of our deer lease giving us 4 miles of good long range tower stand hunting and I bush hog it every year about 60 days before season. As we were finishing up today my son noticed a flat on my right rear and a 450$ service call, no good deed goes unpunished...... John IMG_20230920_112911942.jpgIMG_20230920_114856759_HDR.jpg
 
Looks like you got some rain this summer. I cant plant, ground so hard coulters wont penetrate...should by the end of the week. My buddy had to buy a $1800 tire for his jd last week---sidewall too bad to boot. im glad it wasnt me!! I like the old versatile! marc
 
Looks like you got some rain this summer. I cant plant, ground so hard coulters wont penetrate...should by the end of the week. My buddy had to buy a $1800 tire for his jd last week---sidewall too bad to boot. im glad it wasnt me!! I like the old versatile! marc
Yeah, we got a perfect year for rain, trying to get the last 200 acres of hay cut and waiting for this coming rain to pass.. bought the tractor new in 96, love it. My boys call it the "blue clue" because nobody but the old man has a clue, which way it's going, how to turn the house around, or how to operate it. Old rig for an old man.... John
 
50 years ago I use to do those service calls out in the fields or on skidders up on the side of the mountian at night in the dark. But, it beat wrestling a thousand pound or more wheel and tire around if they brought them into the shop. I hated arriving at the shop and finding a skidder tire or two laying there waiting on me. Now, fixing them on the mountain on the machine and then grilling steaks on the mountain at midnight, they were the good old days. I have pumped a lot of calcium.
 
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Power line and pipe line cross making a perfect X in the center of our deer lease giving us 4 miles of good long range tower stand hunting and I bush hog it every year about 60 days before season. As we were finishing up today my son noticed a flat on my right rear and a 450$ service call, no good deed goes unpunished...... John View attachment 1476816View attachment 1476817
Is that a M125X? I've got the same tractor if so. Was mowing a waterway the other day and just about f'd up! It's been a wet year and mowing is thick, thick, especially down low. I was going about as slow as I could and knew about where a washout is going into the waterway and still ran off into it. Never saw it and I was looking for it the whole time. Well it's even bigger than it was this spring. Tractor slid sideways and took me straight into that waterway. Just about turned that sucker over. That Kubota has an inclination warning alarm. I now know! Talk about useless. I didn't need freakin alarms to tell me I was in a bad spot, distracting as hell while I'm working pedals, levers and steering wheel...with my pants full. Lol!

Sat there a minute, got off and evaluated things. Thought about just stopping and calling a neighbor with a backhoe for help, but I'm not that smart. Got back on, was able to back up a few feet, locked all four together and turning uphill, forgot what gear, revved her up and dumped the clutch...and came out but damn it was iffy.

I mow that ditch at least twice a year every year for about as long as I can remember and have never been in it until then.. I do believe I'll be calling the neighbor soon. He's got an excavation business and now owns the other side of that ditch. I think we're gonna make that a mowable waterway...soon. Lol!
 
50 years ago I use to do those service calls out in the fields or on skidders up on the side of the mountian at night in the dark. But, it beat wrestling a thousand pound or more wheel and tire around if the brought them into the shop. I hated arriving at the shop and finding a skidder tire or two laying there waiting on me. Now, fixing them on the mountain on the machine and then grilling steaks on the mountain at midnight, they were the good old days. I have pumped a lot of calcium.
I was taught a trick. Plenty guys used propane, but you know...My buddies old man used to go to Hot Springs and get scuba tanks filled. 3000 psi with no regulator will air a big skidder tire up in seconds. We are probably lucky we didnt get killed! lots of guys foaming and putting chains on when tread gone now.
that was a tough job you had. My back started aching when i thought about breaking one of those down...
 
Is that a M125X? I've got the same tractor if so. Was mowing a waterway the other day and just about f'd up! It's been a wet year and mowing is thick, thick, especially down low. I was going about as slow as I could and knew about where a washout is going into the waterway and still ran off into it. Never saw it and I was looking for it the whole time. Well it's even bigger than it was this spring. Tractor slid sideways and took me straight into that waterway. Just about turned that sucker over. That Kubota has an inclination warning alarm. I now know! Talk about useless. I didn't need freakin alarms to tell me I was in a bad spot, distracting as hell while I'm working pedals, levers and steering wheel...with my pants full. Lol!

Sat there a minute, got off and evaluated things. Thought about just stopping and calling a neighbor with a backhoe for help, but I'm not that smart. Got back on, was able to back up a few feet, locked all four together and turning uphill, forgot what gear, revved her up and dumped the clutch...and came out but damn it was iffy.

I mow that ditch at least twice a year every year for about as long as I can remember and have never been in it until then.. I do believe I'll be calling the neighbor soon. He's got an excavation business and now owns the other side of that ditch. I think we're gonna make that a mowable waterway...soon. Lol!
It's a 135, but I hate it. Boys get along with it okay but I don't like the seat AND I have to figure out what buttons to flip, push or pull every time I get in it all over again. I got my first education on it right after we got it. Darn thing is too light in the ass end, picked up a pretty good sized hackberry tree that had blown down and was going to take it to a brush pile. Was on a sideling place and went to back UP the hill and the real wheels would just spin, so I stopped, put it in 4 wheel drive with the front wheels cut to the right and started to finish backing up, that right front tire ran right back under me and I damn near flipped it upside down. Just so happened to have my hand on the bucket lever and dropped the lift and it sat back down, but it's useless as a loader with out something hooked on the rear for weight . I told the boys to just get 1 round bale if they are the big ones, you can turn the silly thing over on level ground.... John
 
It's a 135, but I hate it. Boys get along with it okay but I don't like the seat AND I have to figure out what buttons to flip, push or pull every time I get in it all over again. I got my first education on it right after we got it. Darn thing is too light in the ass end, picked up a pretty good sized hackberry tree that had blown down and was going to take it to a brush pile. Was on a sideling place and went to back UP the hill and the real wheels would just spin, so I stopped, put it in 4 wheel drive with the front wheels cut to the right and started to finish backing up, that right front tire ran right back under me and I damn near flipped it upside down. Just so happened to have my hand on the bucket lever and dropped the lift and it sat back down, but it's useless as a loader with out something hooked on the rear for weight . I told the boys to just get 1 round bale if they are the big ones, you can turn the silly thing over on level ground.... John
They are light. Good for mowing but not a workhorse tractor. I get along good with mine but I don't do any heavy work with it either. Hay, bush hogging and planting tractor...no complaints. It has been reliable so far. Knock on wood. That feature< i forget what they call it, where the outer front tire turns faster than the inside when turning, is probably what got me out of that ditch but it's usually pretty useless.
 
They are light. Good for mowing but not a workhorse tractor. I get along good with mine but I don't do any heavy work with it either. Hay, bush hogging and planting tractor...no complaints. It has been reliable so far. Knock on wood. That feature< i forget what they call it, where the outer front tire turns faster than the inside when turning, is probably what got me out of that ditch but it's usually pretty useless.
Yeah, I know the one, if I had of accidentally had it on when I pulled my stunt I would have flipped it. I figure that some brilliant engineering feller that has never seen a farm designed all that....... John
 
Yeah, I know the one, if I had of accidentally had it on when I pulled my stunt I would have flipped it. I figure that some brilliant engineering feller that has never seen a farm designed all that....... John
It'll turn fast and hard, kinda unexpectedly like in that mode. I don't like it either. Nice looking hunting spot you've got there.
 
They are light. Good for mowing but not a workhorse tractor. I get along good with mine but I don't do any heavy work with it either. Hay, bush hogging and planting tractor...no complaints.

Got one of them silly things here too. Don't mind it for baling and spreading. Not a fan of it in front of a discbine. A little squirrelly in the hills.
 
They are light. Good for mowing but not a workhorse tractor. I get along good with mine but I don't do any heavy work with it either. Hay, bush hogging and planting tractor...no complaints. It has been reliable so far. Knock on wood. That feature< i forget what they call it, where the outer front tire turns faster than the inside when turning, is probably what got me out of that ditch but it's usually pretty useless.
I will tell you something you need to know, if it's like the two we have, the computer that runs every thing is UNDER the battery which sits in front of the radiator (more good engineering, so when it leaks or over flows the fan can suck it through the aluminum radiator) and cannot properly cool. After the first one of ours quit we fabricated a mounting bracket to move it up on top and to the side into the air flow and have had no more trouble, plus don't contaminate your hyd fluid with any other brands by switching remote hoses going to different implements with an implement that's been used by a different brand tractor. The longer hoses and cylinders can hold a couple of gallons of oil and the big oranges are really picky about their own oil, take it from me it's an expensive lesson.... John
 
I will tell you something you need to know, if it's like the two we have, the computer that runs every thing is UNDER the battery which sits in front of the radiator (more good engineering, so when it leaks or over flows the fan can suck it through the aluminum radiator) and cannot properly cool. After the first one of ours quit we fabricated a mounting bracket to move it up on top and to the side into the air flow and have had no more trouble, plus don't contaminate your hyd fluid with any other brands by switching remote hoses going to different implements with an implement that's been used by a different brand tractor. The longer hoses and cylinders can hold a couple of gallons of oil and the big oranges are really picky about their own oil, take it from me it's an expensive lesson.... John
I'm aware of the hydraulic fluid thing but I'll look into the computer issue. I don't remember without looking but I don't think mine is like yours. I may be wrong though. So you raised the battery on yours? It is in front of the radiator on mine too.
 
I'm aware of the hydraulic fluid thing but I'll look into the computer issue. I don't remember without looking but I don't think mine is like yours. I may be wrong though. So you raised the battery on yours? It is in front of the radiator on mine too.
No, leave the battery where it is and get the computer out from under it and mount it farther up into the air flow, we just fabricated a different bracket. You will have to take the battery out to see the darn computer, it's idiotic where they put it.... John
 
No, leave the battery where it is and get the computer out from under it and mount it farther up into the air flow, we just fabricated a different bracket. You will have to take the battery out to see the darn computer, it's idiotic where they put it.... John
You peaked my curiosity so I went and looked. The battery sets flat on a tray and it's tough to see under the tray but I sure don't see a computer or wiring harness that looks like it'd feed one. I do see the loom going to the mfwd. Mines a 2008 model fwiw.
 

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