Top 5+ useful John Deere products that aren't tractors

Clean heavy machinery with pressure washers

No matter what kind of labor you're engaged in on a regular basis, it's a given that your equipment will get exceptionally dirty after extensive usage. We're talking real dirty here, too, not just a few specks here and there. If you've got a tractor that's been definitively put through its paces, you need an equally muscular means of cleaning all that gunk off. This is why John Deere offers over two dozen kinds of pressure washers for your heavy cleaning needs.

These are pressure washers powered by either gasoline or electricity to help you wash the assorted dirt and detritus from your vehicles and equipment after a long day of work. They run the gamut of strengths for quick cleans and heavy-duty washing, with the strongest basic model packing up to 4,200 pounds per square inch of water-blasting muscle. In addition to basic washers, John Deere also offers commercial-grade power washers for when you need to clean large quantities of dirty machinery. These devices also come in both electric and gas-powered configurations, and also have built-in water heaters for that extra bit of scrubbing power.

Keep your home or jobsite warm with heavy-duty heaters

When the seasons change and the temperatures drop, it gets a lot harder to get your work done. This is true whether you're working inside at a desk or out in a chilly workshop. But the work still needs to get done, which is why John Deere offers compact heating solutions to keep you from turning into a popsicle.

John Deere's space heaters work for both small and large areas, bringing you the comforting warmth you need with just a tank of propane or kerosene. The smallest one is a propane radiant heater with 18,000 British thermal units, enough to heat up to 600 square feet for up to 65 hours on a 20-pound tank. This would be handy for a large office space or a small workshop or barn. For more intensive heating needs like a wide-open jobsite, John Deere's largest heater model uses 400,000 Btu of kerosene-powered forced-air heating powered by a 1/2-horsepower 120-volt motor to warm up to 10,000 square feet. Even if you're out in the cold, you'll be comfortably warm near this heavy-duty device.

Clean up workshop messes with wet/dry vacuums

You never know what's going to end up on the floor when you're working in a workshop. Of course, everyone does their best to stay neat and tidy for safety's sake, but a little mess is unavoidable, whether it's accumulated sawdust or dripping grease. When messes start to crop up, they may be more than a handful of rags can realistically clean. This is when it's time to bust out the wet/dry vacuum, another category of device provided by John Deere.

John Deere's wet/dry vacs are built to handle various degrees of usage — each is equipped with a special self-cooling motor designed to be resilient against overheating, so they can handle extensive heavy usage. The smallest model of wet/dry vac John Deere offers features a 7-gallon tank with a 1.34-hp 120V motor, providing 127 cubic feet of air suction per minute and an 84-inch waterlift. The heaviest model has a much larger 18-gallon tank with a 1.6-hp 120V motor, getting 108 cubic feet of suction per minute and a 111-inch waterlift.