In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Bush Hog Size

Discussion in 'Chainsaws and Power Equipment' started by Will C, Apr 21, 2019.

  1. MasterMech

    MasterMech The Mechanical Moderator

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    MX series cutters were the gold standard for rotary cutters. Well, the HX/CX Series were pretty decent too if you had enough tractor.
     
  2. 94BULLITT

    94BULLITT

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    I thought MX6 was famous for gearbox failures?
     
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  3. MasterMech

    MasterMech The Mechanical Moderator

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    I didn’t bump into any. If there were, they could have. Even contained to a certain range or serial numbers too. We sold dozens of them in my time with the dealership and never had a problem with any of them.
     
  4. Will C

    Will C

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    Well I bought a Woods BB 72 today. The salesman and I were looking at his inventory yesterday to see what he had avaible. No Land Prides, but had a Woods. As we were looking it over, he said "Wait, I have a used one that has never been used. A guy bought a tractor and a bunch of implements, then traded some of them in on a UTV."
    Sure enough, never used-I don't think it had even been hooked to a tractor. Saved $600 from the new price.
    Even got a new hat. Cost me $30,000 less the last hat (when I bought the tractor and finish mower.)
     
  5. Will C

    Will C

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    I had a chance to use it yesterday. Works well, I was mowing a 3' high field at 3mph or so, same speed I normally go. RPM at the PTO stayed at 540.
    You definitely know you have something behind you, but no problem turning uphill, etc.
    Thanks for all the advice.
     
  6. Hammy

    Hammy

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    Glad it worked out. Enjoy the tool. Wish I was enjoying mine right now but it’s way too wet.
     
  7. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    I have same one Woods 72 Heavy duty. 2 blades are about 65 pounds apiece:jaw:

    2 wet to use it yet.. Brush hog would work... tractor would sink!!
     
  8. Will C

    Will C

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    I hear you about being wet! Was able to cut the fields at my brothers place where I hunt (one of them is in my avatar) but the back field of my property has standing water and is so wet I sink in when I walk across! Hope it dries sometime this year.
     
  9. fordf150

    fordf150

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    might wanna watch if its heavy built and not carry it around allot at travel speeds. I have a 6' on my TC40 and when i purchased it i wanted to buy the heavy duty version and the salesman told me not to....they were having issues with a few guys bending the 3pt arms from the weight bouncing around. info may not apply depending on how heavy built your brush hog is....the one i ended up with is a little over 1000lbs for the 6' but the one i wanted was closer to 1500 pounds.
     
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  10. concretegrazer

    concretegrazer

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    They are a little lighter when you break them. :rofl: :lol:
     
  11. Will C

    Will C

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    Thanks for the tip. This one is around 800 lbs. No way was I considering the next model up. I believe that was 12-1300 lbs. Don't need that capacity. This one is much beefier than the one I used successfully for 10 years with my smaller tractor.
     
  12. fordf150

    fordf150

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    I am rough on a brush hog....if the tractor can push it over i expect the brush hog to chew it up so that means anything up to about 3" diameter gets shredded. tore up the gear box on 2 cheapy ones so when i went to buy a new one i wanted something indestructible. ended up with the bush hog one, it has a massive gear box on it rated for something like 150hp
     
  13. MasterMech

    MasterMech The Mechanical Moderator

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    Fist bump .:tractor:
     
  14. Flamestead

    Flamestead

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    Yup, my 6’ is a Bush Hog 406 with a gear box over 100hp. A key feature for me is to be able to back into things and knock them over, or back into bushel-basket sized rocks and push them out of the way. I think it is is the 1500 lb range - I use it as a counterweight when unloading pallets of fertilizer.
     
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  15. fordf150

    fordf150

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    same here....thats the heaviest 3pt attachment i have so anytime i am doing serious loader work, especially on uneven ground i hook up to it. I have the *ssend of my brush hog all bent up from pushing trees over. my only regret is i let the salesman talk me into the sheer bolt style instead of slipper clutch. He convinced me that a slipper was more work than it was worth because of having to loosen the bolts up to let the clutch slip periodically because they would rust/freeze solid and not slip when needed so i ended up with a sheer bolt style. 1/2" bolts get expensive fast. i can easily go thru a box of 25 per brush hog session.
     
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