Tractor?

  • Thread starter Paul Hovnanian P.E.
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Paul Hovnanian P.E.

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This may be a little off topic, but here goes.

Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
any terrain.

I seem to recall that it as a Kubota, but I may be wrong. Anyone have
any ideas about what it is (was)? I didn't see anything like it on the
Kubota web page.

--
Paul Hovnanian mailto:p[email protected]
------------------------------------------------------------------
Hanlon's Razor:
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by
stupidity.
 
Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote:
> This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
>
> Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
> size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
> backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
> instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
> axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
> system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
> any terrain.
>
> I seem to recall that it as a Kubota, but I may be wrong. Anyone have
> any ideas about what it is (was)? I didn't see anything like it on the
> Kubota web page.
>



try alt.fan.tractors
 
On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 18:40:13 -0800, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
<[email protected]> wrote:

>This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
>
>Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
>size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
>backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
>instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
>axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
>system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
>any terrain.
>
>I seem to recall that it as a Kubota, but I may be wrong. Anyone have
>any ideas about what it is (was)? I didn't see anything like it on the
>Kubota web page.


It may have been a Kubota, but wasn't as small as you remember...
 
PeterD wrote:
>
> On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 18:40:13 -0800, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
> >
> >Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
> >size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
> >backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
> >instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
> >axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
> >system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
> >any terrain.
> >
> >I seem to recall that it as a Kubota, but I may be wrong. Anyone have
> >any ideas about what it is (was)? I didn't see anything like it on the
> >Kubota web page.

>
> It may have been a Kubota, but wasn't as small as you remember...


About the same ride height as a lawn tractor, but somewhat longer. The
tires looked like wide ATV tires, about 18 inches in diameter. The only
articulated machine on the Kubota web site is a loader. The machine I
saw was definitely smaller than one of those.

--
Paul Hovnanian mailto:p[email protected]
------------------------------------------------------------------
If everything is coming your way then you're in the wrong lane.
 
Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote:
> PeterD wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 18:40:13 -0800, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
>><[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
>>>
>>>Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
>>>size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
>>>backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
>>>instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
>>>axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
>>>system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
>>>any terrain.



This?

http://www.power-trac.com/productclasses.htm#T8

--
..boB
2006 FXDI hot rod
2001 Dodge Dakota QC 5.9/4x4/3.92
1966 Mustang Coupe - Daily Driver
1965 FFR Cobra - 427W EFI, Damn Fast.

 
On Mon, 06 Nov 2006 21:41:19 -0700, ".boB"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote:
>> PeterD wrote:
>>
>>>On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 18:40:13 -0800, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
>>><[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
>>>>
>>>>Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
>>>>size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
>>>>backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
>>>>instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
>>>>axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
>>>>system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
>>>>any terrain.

>
>
>This?
>
>http://www.power-trac.com/productclasses.htm#T8


Ouch, expensive! <g>
 
".boB" wrote:
>
> Paul Hovnanian P.E. wrote:
> > PeterD wrote:
> >
> >>On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 18:40:13 -0800, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
> >><[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>>This may be a little off topic, but here goes.
> >>>
> >>>Many (about 20) years ago, I saw a guy using a small tractor, about the
> >>>size of one of a riding mower. It had a power takeoff for a small
> >>>backhoe attachment (and other goodies). It had all wheel drive, but
> >>>instead of the usual front wheel steering, it had fixed front and rear
> >>>axles and was articulated in the middle with a hydraulic steering
> >>>system. The guy using it claimed that this thing could get into almost
> >>>any terrain.

>
> This?
>
> http://www.power-trac.com/productclasses.htm#T8


Yep. If that's not it exactly, its very similar (it was many years ago
and the design may have changed somewhat).

--
Paul Hovnanian mailto:p[email protected]
------------------------------------------------------------------
"The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is probably the day
they start making vacuum cleaners" - Ernst Jan Plugge
 
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