I am in the market for a bush hog (rotary mower). I think I have it narrowed down to the Bush Hog brand and Brown. I am a bit confused by some of combinations and gear ratings. For example, Bush Hog has a medium duty mower with a 10 ga deck and a 110 HP gear box. Their Heavy duty only has a 90 hp gearbox, but has a 7 ga deck? This seems odd to me. Also, the Brown has a 7 ga deck and a 90 hp gearbox and is rated as medium duty.
I have been told that the gearbox rating is the most important thing to consider, but it doesn't make sense that a lower gear rating would be on a heavier duty mower. This will likely be the one and only purchase of a rotary mower for me, and I want to get one that will last. Any explanation of the differences between gearbox ratings and quality/longevity are appreciated. Also, any suggestions as to other things I should look for are welcome.
I intend to use the mower to clear brush and small trees ( < 2 inches) and other general uses. The tractor is 52 HP at the PTO.
Thanks.
Your question is so technical I really am not sure how I can answer it. For starters I would think that the Medium/ Heavy Duty rating is a very subjective thing at most. I would not put too much stock in any rating such as that.
As you mention gearbox durability is the main thing. There is an incredible amount of shock load and torque placed on this major component when you hit roots, trees and dare I say...rocks? Steel thickness would also play a role in this components failure rate as well though. With thinner steel, I can only imagine the gearbox would flex and the bearings squeezed and compromised if really subjected to stress. I would also assume that more vibration would occur that would effect gear life.
If I had to buy a bush hog I would have to recommend the Bush Hog brand. Our family has owned one for more than thirty years and it has no signs of reaching retirement. I doubt anything today is made as good as it was thirty years ago, but Bush Hog has a strong reputation nonetheless.
Perhaps one of the reasons it has lasted so long though, is that we do not use a gear lube in the gearbox. That seal failed years ago so for the past few years we have used a Crater Compound type grease used in locomotive gearboxes. I have no idea where a non-railroader would obtain such stuff, but the grease is designed for such stress, is thick so seals are optional, and so tacky that WD-40 is the only thing I know of that takes it off.
I am not so sure how much all of this will help you in your new purchase, but I wish you all the best of luck.
Here is a link to some pictures I took while Bush Hogging our tree plantation a few years ago for whatever it is worth...
http://www.railroadmachinist.com/WDL_Trees.html
All the brands mentioned are great in a single spindle cutter. Another is Bushwhacker. They only make HD cutters (4 inch cap.)...
Check the weight of the stumpjumper. The more weight, the more interia you have.
Somthing else to consider is the driveline safety system. Some use a slip clutch and some use a shear bolt. Shear bolts are nice and simple till you run out of bolts for the day. : Slip clutches instantly recover but require some maintence and periodic adjustment.
Buy or make safety chains for both ends of the deck. I found an old basket ball in a fencerow today and the cutter threw it 60-70 feet. Put several fist sized holes in it. Had it been a heavy object there's no telling what damage it would do.
Woods gearboxes seem to be weak in batwings but that's another thread.
Anyone want a slightly used basket ball? :D
You bring up one of my favorite subjects Boardmaker on any topic...safety.
Another problem you mentioned about the driveline protection system of sheer bolts is that after a few sheer pins break, they shove in a grade 8 bolt. Sure beats buying a ton of those grade 2 bolts you get at the Box Stores, but then when you hit something real hard, well if the bolt doesn't break, something has to give!
Another thing is having passengers aboard. I know as a kid I spent days riding on my father's tractor while bushogging, but that was another time and another place. A few years ago a 2 year old child fell off a tractor and was run over while his father was bushogging right here in town. The child did not live. Just the other day I was watching a show on TV that depicted an older farmer who was also run over while bushogging. While that man lived, the point of the whole story was that he should not have.
I do not want to nag, but let's not get complacent with the implements either huh? I would rather make a post such as this, then to make a post saying member so and so was recently maimed or killed while bushogging.
It seems to me that most manufacturers rate their mowers more by the thickness of the steel than just the gear box. That is if your cutting 4" saplings with a mower rated heavy duty you need a good thick deck or it will never hold-up. A medium duty for 2" saplings doesn't need quite the deck thickness or reinforcement. If you look at most gear boxes and compare the usage rating , not just the hp, there is usually a physical difference in size and design for light vs. heavy.
Deadwood I know what you mean about the seals. Back in the '60s my uncle bought a John Deer tractor and a mower. The seal was bad from the begging and ,after a few attempts to fix it, John Deer replace the oil with greese. It was still the same grease when I got the mower in the early '90s. The only advice my uncle gave me was if the tractor can ride it down the mower can cut it. :D
brdmkr. You say brush and small trees 2" ?? How many acres a year are you doing ? Any outside work etc.
I have gone thru three JD's in 20 years.. Lots clearing, pasture and field rehab.
" Slip clutch is a must have." I have no mercy on my brush mowers,they are purchased nowing i will be relacing it in a few years.. Mower #1 5" purchased 2 MO's used lasted 8 years " rock threw deck driver shaft snapped. Mower #2 JD 615 purchsed new lasted 7 years strattled large rock tractor dropped into rut what a sound !!! checked things out all looked fine mowed for anothe hour and then BANG Power box got the runs drive shaft snapped parts every where. Went to dealer got # 3 an MX 5 Med duty made it threw this spring and then doing some pasture rehab for a neighbor farm, the mower came down w/ Hardware disease!! She sucked up a chunk of steel in the pasture and that was it !!! spit the blade deck out landed 50' away no noise or anything " Made an errie POOF sound" when it stopped.......
The farm I worked on as a kid had a Bush Hog bought brand new lasted a good 20 + years and then the deck rotted out,,, Maitainance is a must clean down the deck and oil for winter storage.... Grease,Grease, Grease.....
I really don't think these machines are ment for trees and 2 inch clump brush need a backhoe or loader... Brontasarus brush grinder might be the answer....... Although my machines have paid for them selves and made me quite a bit of money. mower #1 cost $525. = $75 per year income per year $.00 mower #2 cost $ = $185 per year mower # 3 cost = $ 375 per year. cleared $ from the last pasture rehab before the mower retired... Will be getting a new on in the spring !! going extra heavy duty .....
Quote from: crtreedude on October 31, , 05:18:02 AM
Has anyone had any experience with the Bushhog that goes behind an ATV? We have a lot of land that we keep clean, I was wondering if it might work well. We have a spacing between trees of 3.5 meters so it should pass with no problem.
They work reasonably well but are much lighter than the three point mounts. There is no pto on the atv so they have a long arm out the back with the engine hanging off it. PITA to hook up and remove too. Fine for the acreage owner or hobby farmer but too pricey and not for serious work.
As others have mentioned, the "heavy" and "medium" dutly rating are very subjective. Metal guage and gearbox HP ratings are the best objective measures you will find. For cutting grass and other soft vegetation, a lighter duty mower is fine, but if you want to cut brush and saplings, get the most heavy duty mower you can afford, but be sure your tractor can still lift it.
For the use you describe, the deck metal guage matters just as much as the gearbox, in my experience. I woudl also highly recommend a slip clutch. Cutting woody material pounds the hell out of the mower, and the deck will develop cracks if it is too light. I've used a Woods 4' "medium" duty mower for many years now in some very abusive conditions, and last year I had to weld up all the cracks, pound the grearbox mount back into alignment, and rebuild the gearbox. For a variety of weight/terrain reasons, I can't use a heavier mower, but would if I could.
We had 2 BMB bushhogs when I was growing up. The first one was a 6' wide one and just died 2 years ago because the gearbox gave out. The other one was the biggest 3pt one thatwe could get- it had 2 blades on it. The gearboxes gave out on it too- but only one of them- so it chewed up the blades pretty quick.
Right down the road from here is the Rhino plant. They are the previous manufacturer of the BMB brand. They have done a lot to improve their driveline. Whenever I get a tractor for my place, I will be getting a Rhino.
Just my 2 cents
Charles
We have a heavy duty Bush Hog brand 5 ft pull type that has torn up two tractors and put a lot of wear on three or four others in the past 35 years. We've put a lot of blades on it and replaced a few bearings and hundreds of shear pins, but nothing major. It's still doing a good job.
We also have a 10' sidewinder that we bought about 10 years ago. We cover a lot of acres with it, but not as rough of cutting as the Bush Hog has done. It has a slip clutch which has caused no problems, but the metal sides are about gone, I've spent hours welding on it, had to replace the stump jumpers. The gearboxes have held up, but had to replace one of them right off because the shaft that holds one of the three blades broke. The warrenty covered it, but won't the one I broke last week. I think the machine is ok, we just have too rough of ground for a wide fixed cutter.
One type of driveline protection that I don't believe has been mentioned is the friction drive that the smaller 'sidewinders' use. I wouldn't mind having one of those on a 3 pt. People who use them seem to like them.
I've spent this week looking at my local options for a shredder, as well as learning more about some of the ones I can buy and have shipped to me (especially the Tennessee River Implements cutters, as the price is quite nice).
Heavy duty to one person is medium to another
My father in law suggested I get a 6' heavy duty shredder. He was comparing it to his 5' heavy duty shredder. Most have said that a 6' heavy duty shredder is too my for my L with 29-30 PTO HP.
Turns out, after many more questions, he was primarily referring to the gearbox, that he's seen many people blow the gearboxes on those, especially ones bought at Tractor Supply, etc. His example of a good shredder was his Bush Hog Squealer SQ160. He says the gearbox is better, and the round design, with the top having less areas for water to pool, and hold grass are highly desirable. I ran his 5' Bush Hog behind my LDT, and it ran very well, with barely a slowdown, except in the thickest of the blue stem you can find on his property. Additionally, it cut through smaller mesquite trees with ease, which is something desireable at my place.
I find that his Bush Hog has the same deck thickness as the TRI medium duty cutters.
Gearbox Sizing isn't precise
I find that gearbox HP requirements aren't well explained by the manufacturers, and I find posts that say you can go with the bigger gearbox and it just gives you more leeway, but some manufacturers (like Bush Hog) list a HP range (with a minimum). The Bush Hog Squealer 172 (since I have a comparison with my father in law's 160) lists a range of 30-45 PTO HP. That seems like it is very much borderline, with the listed specs on my L showing either 29 or 30 PTO HP (I don't know what gear early versus late means, so I go with the late one. I guessed late meant at the PTO shaft on the back of the tractor).
Factors that are truly important
What you are cutting
If it's just pasture land, with nothing big, there is less risk of you bogging the engine. Cutting through thick, wet grass taxes it more. It seems to me that this is more a function of the size of the bite you are taking, on a 5' cutter, you are biting off less than a 6' cutter. I would assume the gearbox has no bearing here, unless you are undersized. So, for me, it seems that if I can get away with a 6' cutter with the output of my tractor, I'd like to go this way.
How heavy the cutter is
Primarily, this seems to affect the ability for you to lift the cutter. The TRI 6' cutter with the 45 HP gearbox has a listed weight of 708 lbs, and if you upgrade to the 90 HP gearbox, it adds 60 lbs. From this alone, I would opt for the cost of the 90 HP gearbox, because it feels like with me mowing with the FEL, the 60 pounds wouldn't be a problem. Tractordata says my tractor can lift at least pounds (without my understanding the difference between the two specifications listed, I picked the minimum). Given that, I assume it's only a matter of whether my front tires are going to come off the ground, so again, I doubt that 60 pounds is going to be the metaphorical straw that broke the camel's back, but I could be wrong. Current bush hog models (BH16) seem to weigh similar to that of TRI.
Matching the gearbox to the tractor size
This one as I mentioned above seems to have some voodoo involved. Nobody lists a minimum HP for the gearbox, but I would imagine having a heavier duty gearbox implies potentially more HP loss than a smaller model. Can I pick up the TRI model with a 90HP gearbox to attempt to future proof my purchase, and work with a bigger tractor later?
Other niceties
I find that the Bush Hog and Land Pride models have a rounded shape, and less channels for water/wet grass to get stuck on, reducing the likelihood of it rusting out. My father in law's old cutter had the deck rust out due to it collecting debris and not properly cleaned. I'm aware that if you are very good with taking care of it, it should not be a problem, but sometimes life intervenes, and it seems like a great feature.
Ability to get parts? I have dealers for Bush Hog as well as Land Pride around, so it seems relatively easy to get parts. If I pick a model not sold locally, parts may be less available.
My ultimate factors
I want the biggest shredder that I can get (seems like 6'), with the best gearbox and body design, to last me for the long haul, even if I spend a bit more money up front. Given that, I need it to work behind my Kubota L, or it's worthless.
I checked pricing on the Land Pride RCF locally, and was quoted $ (which turns into $ with tax). If I compare that to comparable pricing for a TRI cutter shipped to my property, I'm spending around $ less. I can see only the two main benefits, rounded design, and locally available parts. I'm tempted to save the $ and understand that the deck needs to be taken care of. At the moment, I can store the tractor in the barn, but I believe the shredder will stick out, so I have to assume it's going to see some rainfall.
Does anybody see anything wrong with my reasoning, after reading more threads, having seat time behind a 5' cutter, and getting pricing and options from local and online sellers?
Last but not least, I recorded some video of what I encounter on the property (I only have video from right now, with the grass not fully grown into summer, but it's still representative).
Thanks!
Mark