DanielW
Well-known Member
- Location
- Haliburton, Ontario
This question may be better posted in the backhoes/crawlers/dozers section, but I thought I might get more opinions here. I just picked up a Massey 4X4 backhoe for peanuts. Well, it's actually not a backhoe anymore because the PO removed the hoe and cab, so it's really just an open-station loader. Model 50HX: 4X4, no nonsense, Perkins diesel and seems to run/function well. I bought this for our Southern farm: We don't do nearly as much there as at our Northern farm and thus don't have nearly as much heavy equipment down there because we don't have the need for it. But I still wanted another loader for that farm. At present, all we have on the Southern farm for loaders are a Ford 555 backhoe (which is a big, lumbering beast to use for things like loading bales and handling logs) and a Cockshutt 540 with a Wagner loader (which is rather light/small/flimsy for a lot of bale & log-handling we use it for). I think this Massey will fit the bill nicely.
My question: I have a sawmill on that farm, and it's pretty handy to tow a log wagon to/from the bush with whatever tractor I'm using to load. Similarly, it's handy to tow bale wagons between fields/barns with the same tractor used to load. It'll be easy enough for me to fabricate a drawbar onto the back of the Massey to be able to tow with. But would anyone be concerned with using a backhoe with its torque-converter/hydraulic shuttle for towing? The farm is all contained in one block - there'd be no road travel, and no towing for more than 20 minutes at a time. I can't see why there'd be any concern: Towing a wagon/trailer with good rolling tires seems to me like it would be a lot easier on the drivetrain than the loader work that you typically use a backhoe for. But because you're towing for several minutes straight with no rest period (unlike loader work where you're constantly switching between hard & easy drive-train use), would you have any concerns?
My question: I have a sawmill on that farm, and it's pretty handy to tow a log wagon to/from the bush with whatever tractor I'm using to load. Similarly, it's handy to tow bale wagons between fields/barns with the same tractor used to load. It'll be easy enough for me to fabricate a drawbar onto the back of the Massey to be able to tow with. But would anyone be concerned with using a backhoe with its torque-converter/hydraulic shuttle for towing? The farm is all contained in one block - there'd be no road travel, and no towing for more than 20 minutes at a time. I can't see why there'd be any concern: Towing a wagon/trailer with good rolling tires seems to me like it would be a lot easier on the drivetrain than the loader work that you typically use a backhoe for. But because you're towing for several minutes straight with no rest period (unlike loader work where you're constantly switching between hard & easy drive-train use), would you have any concerns?
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