New Holland Skid Steer

QUESTION:

I am shopping for a small skid steer. Looking at Bobcat 763 and John Deere
240.

Use is house construction support then landscaping, road maint, snow plowing on 35 steep wooded acres in Colorado Mountains.

ANSWER:

I just wanted to pass along this about my skidsteer. I have a New Holland 565. It is a 40hp, the 665 is the same motor with turbo and adds about ten hp. The New Hollands have the same running gear and body as the John Deere, just a different motor. I think the wheel base is a little shorter on the Bobcat and that may give them a little more bounce, which can be hard to stop on a skidsteer. I purchased my machine in 1998 with about 500 hrs. on it. It has done everything I wanted it to and has required little to keep it in top shape. I payed
$16,900 for the machine and a set of forks. Had to add a trailer for
$1900. But if you are working on hillsides or in mud, the biggest mistake would be not to get a set of tracks. I had to add a set for a couple of hillside jobs, cost $2700. The track purchase is the only sore point in my dealings with New Holland, and now I will pay them back a little. They offered me 6% money to purchase the tracks, I could hardly pass that up since my construction money at the time was about 10%. So I purchased the tracks on a credit line of 6% interest. Every thing was fine for a few months, all payments where paid on time, then New Holland informed me that they where selling the credit line and any new money would be 19.8%. I told them that I had plenty of credit cards with that kind of rate that I rarely use and I wouldn't be needing anything from them. I was to be able to pay off the tracks at the agreed to 6%. Instead I ended up with two accounts one at 6% with the track balance on it, and one at 19.8% with no balance on it (which I had told them I had no use for) When I sent them monthly payments, which account do you think they put the money in, you got it, the one with the zero balance and 19.8% interest. Soon they were bitching and complaining about me not sending in my payments on the tracks. After some time and work on my part, I got them to put the funds in the correct account and told them to put the 19.8% account where the sun don't shine. I payed off the tracks to close all dealings with New Holland, and although my tractor has been an excellent machine, if you deal with New Holland, watch your wallet, because their word doesn't mean to them.


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