@wildbill23c and
@rusty ol ranger I know you guys are talking about 20 to 30 year old trucks and I get that, but I can tell you that there is currently NO gasoline engine offered in any of the big three brands that can even come close to the towing capability of the diesels offered by those same brands. This has been the case since the mid to late 90's. Y'all are talking about towing 10k. My 6.7 F250 with 3.55 gears pulls right at 20k like it's almost not even there. That's trailer, Kubota 97-s, mulching head, bucket and grapple. A '92 F250 with a 460 might pull it, but it wouldn't like it. I really do not understand why some people are so dead set against diesels. I have a few friends that are the same way. I'll give you higher maintenance costs, but everything else is just better when you're talking about actually working the truck.
Dead set against a diesel? I never said that. You don't buy a diesel truck to tow something a few times a year. Now, if you are towing at max weight every day, yes a diesel makes sense....A brand new truck with the diesel engine box checked immediately adds $10k+ to your purchase price. You can buy a lot of gas for $10k, and not have the issues that today's diesel engines have with electronics and emissions disasters....and for me where my truck would be sitting most of the time, it makes absolutely no sense to own a diesel pickup, and yes a 92 F250 will tow your Kubota 97S just fine, I see people around here where I live doing it all the time....
I don't care to have an enormous truck payment either. If you are buying/leasing a truck for commercial/business use cool, you get the truck free because you write it off on your taxes, those of us who need a truck to do work occasionally a few times a year don't care for all that additional cost up front and in the future when things start failing and you mention Diesel, the dollars start multiplying real quick at the shop.
Like I said, if you tow at max weight every day of the year cool buy the diesel because it'll suit your needs, for those who take their campers to the mountains a couple times a year, no you don't need a diesel. My 88 F250 with the 460 wouldn't pass gas stations, but neither does your diesel....it just stops at the diesel pump instead. My grandparents pulled a 21 foot travel trailer all over the country with that F250 for 20+ years and never had any problems...about 4 years ago the truck went to my uncle as I didn't need it and he needed a heavier duty truck for the stuff he was doing...the neglect and abuse he's given that truck in the past few years I'm surprised at 740k+ miles that it still runs and drives. The 460 and the C6 apparently are pretty hard to kill LOL.
Would I buy a diesel? Maybe at some point if I started doing tractor work really frequently, but my tractor and your Skid Steer don't even weigh nearly the same, I think with everything including the tractor loaded on my trailer I'd be lucky to hit 6k. Huge difference pulling 6k VS 10K+ LOL....6k ain't anywhere close to needing a diesel, and honestly any gas truck built in the past few decades will pull your Skid Steer around, and it may not like it but it'll do it pretty well. Gearing is the main issue, many people buy trucks today to use as family sedans, they want them to ride like that too, and get the fuel economy of a family sedan...so suspension goes out the window and so does gear ratios, they get the lowest numerically available gear ratio to give them great fuel economy, but the poor guy that gets that truck to do truck things later on as a 2nd or 3rd owner quickly realizes that 3.55 gear ratio don't do crap for towing....luckily the 88 F250 I had came with the 4.30 axle ratio, it'll pull whatever you want, wherever you want it to go, just not past very many gas stations.
I only do a few tractor jobs a year, nothing anywhere close to paying to own a diesel pickup that would sit most of the year. I don't load my trucks down enough to justify the additional cost of a diesel in initial purchase price, nor repairs and maintenance. I'm sure if I ever advertised for tractor work, I'd probably be pretty busy given I have a sub-compact tractor and implements that fit into places the big guys can't get their tractors into, but my tractor was purchased as a private party sell, not for commercial use, so it would void the warranty by using it as a commercial use unit. If I ever did go into business doing tractor work, I'd have a larger heavier duty trailer, multiple machines, and an HD diesel pickup for sure, but for no more than I'm doing diesel don't make sense...especially when I'm not being paid for the jobs.