FLU419 Pros/Cons
I’ve been looking at buying one for a while and thought some input from owners might be a good idea. I’ve been living offgrid in the mile high desert for 20+ years and athough we all seem to be experiencing an extreme climate, mine traditionally features winter nights in the 13F to 20F range, early summer days over 100F, mid summer torrential monsoons with a lot of lightning and lots of mosquitoes, flash flooding, lots of clay to bog down in, and year round a very high UV index because of the elevation. The SEE’s backhoe doesn’t have a cab or cover over the operator which could be problematic in many of those situations unless one ‘dresses appropriately’.
So why am I interested in a SEE?
It’s a backhoe and loader that I could drive on most local roads and possibly haul a dump trailer without a CDL if the trailer GVWR is 4 tons or slightly less. I realize I’d be slow poking.
I have 20 acres that I want to construct some ponds and swales upon, need to do a fair bit of small mesquite tree removal, road maintenance (am a mile off paved roads), and I build earthen structures and using wheelbarrows and shovels and my back for everything is getting old. (my walls are sand bags filled with Adobe clay from my property). I also want to build cisterns and earth bermed greenhouses and also have a couple friends living offgrid who could use help with projects each about 15 miles away. The only other viable options seem to be a backhoe or excavator, plus a trailer, a bigger truck than I otherwise own (perhaps a small dump truck) and a CDL. The SEE is a cost effective alternative- so long as I don’t buy a lemon and can do most of the work on the vehicle myself.
I could also potentially do a 10-20’hours of side work each month for other offgrid folks in the mountains around me. Some of their properties cant be accessed by lowboy trailers and non 4x4 trucks. I’m involved with two local offgrid builders groups and nobody in either group has a backhoe- if I want to cater to people like me, having a Unimog that can cross running washes and washed out roads and steep off-road grades would be ideal— especially with earthmoving capability. Do you think the FLU419 would be reliable enough for this?
If I forego side work, I could get an enclosed cab backhoe + loader or tracked excavator. I’ve seen dump trucks and tractors with punctured tires from driving over mesquite limbs that shear off or were cut down and grew back a few inches but hidden by grass, whereas a tracked vehicle could wade into my landscape with less hazard but I probably won’t have the $ to buy a separate tow vehicle and trailer so would end up just using a tracked vehicle on my property if I go that route. The backhoe on the FLU419 could remove the mesquite before I drive in an area, but going off-road in the greater landscape and other folks properties might get expensive and wearisome if I lose tires.
Swales and berms as well as loading older piles of clay/dirt that have been rained on and dried hard might be more than the non-crawler gearing of the FLU419 are up for, in terms of using the Schmidt loader. How expensive is a replacement clutch- maybe I could just commit to wearing it out when loading tough materials? But I could take time with the backhoe and then move the loosened material with the loader, too. Or spend somewhat less on a used Deere 450 crawler backhoe + loader but be confined to my property, still with no cab (unless I throw another$25K at a heavily used newer model).
An FLU419 with low miles, low hours, so long as it has new seals and hoses and such SOUNDS like a better idea than a ‘common name brand machine with 4,000 hours on it’, especially because it’s potentially more versatile and fits more of the usage options I’m interested in pursuing.
BTW, I seem to be getting old and can’t stand being in 100+F for hours at a time anymore, which is a major reason for considering a backhoe with a cab… though I do own an ice vest, a bucket for water to pour over myself and a wide brimmed hat.
My max budget is 35-40K when I sell a piece of property next month. I don’t do credit so don’t have a credit rating, so I’ll have just one shot at this to hopefully get it right. (That’s my attempt at justifying my long-winded post).