MIA

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Racin'Jacin
Posts: 359
Joined: Tue Oct 28, 2008 11:01 pm

MIA

Post by Racin'Jacin »

Yeah I've been real busy lately. Figured I'd catch up (also explains why I'm commenting on old posts). Where do I even start? Well a couple years back my dad passed and I opted to buy his farm from the estate. Long story I'll spare you the "heir that never met him but decided I shouldn't buy the farm" story. Insert a few cuss words on my behalf and you've pretty much got the rest of it. Anyways the property us in rough shape. Well everything there is. At some point I decided I needed a backhoe. No I know nothing about them - boy I sure could have used Stans help there. I digress. So after a year of looking at trashed and overpriced backhoes my buddy found one at an auction that was pretty decent. An older Case 580D 4 wheel drive and an extendahoe! Didn't really need both those options but why not! Long story short I probably paid a bit too much, but honestly I'd do it again in a second because I can now make some serious progress. Did some very minor work to it - sets was assembled (and welded in) backwards - resulting in it rotating the opposite way its supposed to. Meaning I'd usually crack my knee on the toolbox or kick off the parking brake when spinning around. Fixed a few knobs, door closer - just super minor stuff. Now it was time to learn how to operate it. Start pulling levers and see what happens! Now keep in mind I know nothing about this backhoe or any other one, but my previous tool was a shovel so THIS (to me) is the greatest thing in the world.
First order of business was the walkout basement stairs (if you could call them that) were nit only a disaster but also I suspected was the cause if constant water in the basement, There's other contributing factors but a lack if a drain at the bottom of the stairs wasn't helping. Initially I thought I'd put in a French drain maybe 20-25 feet away. Then the hotrodder kicked in and I thought ain't no kill like overkill some went 75 feet. I also added a T in the line to give an option to take it to the ditch if I changed my mind. Right wrong or indifferent - its been working perfectly so far. Knock on wood. I kinda skipped over the 6'X6' pad we poured at the base of the stairs and the two mini retaining walls we put in. I had planned on doing concrete steps, but ran outta time before winter.
Did some grading of the front yard - moved a crap load of dirt there. Far from done but getting there.

So now I'm up to two running "tractors" there. I've an old Oliver 1850 - 354 Perkins diesel with more gears than I can count. I think its 4 gears up, four gears down and then a hydrashift high/low which is more like X3 because there's underdrive, overdrive and 1:1 plus a couple reverse gears thrown in there just for fun! It's too big for the stuff I have, but it gets by. It did tear up the POS backblade i found there. I welded up a new mount for it, but honestly I should just get a bigger one. Recently one of the buried hydraulic seals is starting to leak. I thinking have to pull the trans to get to it ! Yikes!

Lately I've just been using the CASE anyways. Fir comparison I think the Oliver is nearing 100hp plus 100hp on the PTO probably in the 10 or 11 thousand pound range (its only 2 wheel drive). The case I think might Be in the 60 hp range so it's technically a smaller tractor but weighs in the 14 or 15 thousand pound range. It also has a cab so that's mega cool because when the rain cones and you're in the middle of a project you just smile. Compared to the Oliver where you curse mother nature a bit before going inside.

So it's OFFICIAL I'm now one of those off road 4 wheel drive guys...well sorta. :-)

The property itself is basically a disaster but we're getting there. Got several junk vehicles hauled away and do more and more each time. The house needs a ton of work - thats a huge understatement. There's 18 acres - I made a big dirt pile for a pistol backstop. The barn probably should be torn down but I'm thinking i should try to save it. Eventually i'd like to have something built. its definitely become a love hate relationship there as it seems everything that can go wrong will do it in spades there. Still dragging tools back and forth - trying to leave stuff I would be too heart broken if it got stolen. Which leads me to why I chose a backhoe over a mini excavator. Again right wrong or indifferent my thought was simply this were not there 99percent of the time. Any crackhead with a S10 and a POS trailer could steal a mini excavator. Moving the 15K lb backhoe is gonna take some much better stuff. Not that they couldn't unjust thought it was less in demand, harder to move and therefor less likely.


Holy Smokes ! I type far more than I planned!

Racin'Jacin
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MostMint
Posts: 3009
Joined: Thu Jul 21, 2005 12:11 pm
Location: in the garage

Re: MIA

Post by MostMint »

Big backhoe will tend to be cheaper than a compact tractor with a backhoe and compact tractors can walk off pretty easily too with a half decent full size pickup. The Chinese mini excavators are cheap but no warranties and pretty much a crap shoot as to how good they are.

What city is this in and how much land did you get yourself into?
[quote="Basement Paul"]Is that a mint rocketship on the hood?? :shock:
-BP[/quote]
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Basement Paul
Posts: 3624
Joined: Sun Jul 17, 2005 9:27 pm
Location: In the dirt.

Re: MIA

Post by Basement Paul »

Big backhoes seem like fun, because, well, they're big and badass. Do you have plans to actually move there someday or is this going to be just a getaway? I see some of your posts on FB, but don't think I get all of them. Maybe a couple pictures here of the house, property, etc, would be cool.

-BP
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Racin'Jacin
Posts: 359
Joined: Tue Oct 28, 2008 11:01 pm

Re: MIA

Post by Racin'Jacin »

MostMint, its in Waterford Pa which is near Erie. It's about an hour and half from me. 18 acres run down dairy farm. Needs a LOT! I hate Chicom products so those were out of the question. I considered a used Bobcat, but even whooped those are pretty spendy.

BP, Just a get away where I can relax and shoot some targets. The 580 is a beast! I love it. I can run it all day on 5 gallons of diesel.

Probably the biggest challenge there other than everything needs work is that some how my dad got by on nearly no tools. And what little is there is incomplete or already broken. So you've got to be on your toes when planning projects. To say it can be mega frustrating is a HUGE understatement.

The neighbors are mega cool. One keeps calling me stubborn for NOT borrowing his equipment. Says he has dozers, backhoes, skidsteer, etc. I relented and told him I just might borrow a dozer when the spring ground firms up. Of course I have NO IDEA how to operate a dozer! think he said its only 20,000 lbs so its not a crap ton heavier than my backhoe so that gives me a little confidence. Very little. Hey give the guy with ZERO depth perception a big backhoe and a bulldozer what could possibly go wrong????


RacinJacin
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MostMint
Posts: 3009
Joined: Thu Jul 21, 2005 12:11 pm
Location: in the garage

Re: MIA

Post by MostMint »

I've got like 300 lbs of extra hand tools sitting around over here - not sure what u need but I'm dealing.

90 minutes isn't too bad but you can't just pop in and work on it for an hour. Nice chunk of land.
[quote="Basement Paul"]Is that a mint rocketship on the hood?? :shock:
-BP[/quote]
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Racin'Jacin
Posts: 359
Joined: Tue Oct 28, 2008 11:01 pm

Re: MIA

Post by Racin'Jacin »

MostMint, I'm good on tools, my issue is remembering what I have there vs what I need there for a particular job!

BTW The 580 is more scary doing a wheelie than the digger is! The Oliver does a pretty mean wheelie too!


RacinJacin
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GMJohnny
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Joined: Wed Feb 04, 2009 10:56 am
Location: Auburn Twp, Oh

Re: MIA

Post by GMJohnny »

You can use the individual foot brakes to steer that 580 when doing
a wheelie! Extend that hoe a bit and try it!

GM
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