After pointing out the issues with it they realize it's not going to be worth much. I believe the house is sold, but allegedly the new owners would be fine with leaving the crawler there until spring. Wrenching on it in the snow wouldn't be fun & the driveway & road is about 1/2 mile of ice, so that will put things off a good few months.
Do I try & make an offer at scrap prices for it & pay to get it hauled home? Do I gamble that the drive train is in serviceable condition & that the engine didn't get water in it. I can spend a couple weeks doing the wiring easily enough. I hear the dry clutches are a likely to freeze up, but Colorado is a dry climate, so corrosion generally isn't a huge issue like it is in more humid climates. It's an hour away & I'm going to guess it will be a grand or 2 for somebody with an appropriate setup load & haul it home.
I'm not looking for much. I'd be happy if I could get a cheap machine that would do 10-15 hours of work a year for the next 5-10 years. A rubber tired backhoe under 12k lbs I could haul would make more sense, but crawlers are cool. I've seen a few 350s around, but not many & none with a hoe. I've got a 420c with a loader & have had to wrench on it a fair bit, so I have an inkling as to what I may be getting into. My bucket list has "own a bulldozer on it". I've come to the conclusion that my 420c with a loader on it isn't a bulldozer & stumbled across this not a bulldozer. But this one is a diesel & has the hoe, which will be a bit practical around the property. I have the Kubota L4060 for doing practical stuff & side jobs like mowing & driveway maintenance. I don't really expect to take the crawler off my acreage.
The bad
- Missing pre-filter
- Mystery 2' hydraulic hose, probably related to the 8' hose hooked up to the right side lift cylinder that's hanging on the track
- Lots of grime & oil around the backhoe
- Backhoe has the rotary swing motor on it, which I hear is problematic compared to the swing cylinder setup
- Lots of dust & oil on the bucket curl cylinder
- Missing track pad
- Lots of the other hoses look crusty & original
- Wiring
- Drive sprocket seems in decent shape
- Bushings are a bit egg shaped, but seem to have a bit of life left in them
- Track tension seems to be good
If moisture made it past the pre-filter would it be likely to make it past the filter itself
Engine, transmission & steering gear are unknowns. Other than the missing pre-filter I'm going to guess that things were working before the wiring took the machine down. Where would I try & bar the engine over to see if it's locked up? Or just try to jump the starter directly & see if it will turn over?
I'm assuming a come along and/or ratchet straps to lift the loader & hoe while cycling the hydraulics. I could also take my 40hp Kubota tractor up & hope the 1,600lbs of loader lift would move the implements. I'm not sure if 5k lbs of Kubota would be able to pull the crawler, even if it was in neutral.
Should I gamble a couple grand that I can get an ok machine? I'm assuming if the engine has water in it or is locked up, or the tranny doesn't work that's pretty much instantly a loss & i becomes a parts machine or scrap. I'm assuming I could deal with brakes or clutches. Hydraulic hoses going are a given at some point & I've been through that before on the 420c & a friends mini-backhoe.
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