Brush Cutter for Jinma

/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #1  

mitchash

Gold Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2006
Messages
381
Location
Greene, NY
Tractor
Mahindra MAX 28XL, Jinma 254 (Sold)
I am looking for a brush cutter for my Jinma 254, what would be a good size for this tractor and about what would one cost? Thanks
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #2  
I am looking for a brush cutter for my Jinma 254, what would be a good size for this tractor and about what would one cost? Thanks

I run a 5' Brushhog on my 254, and it works great. Cost? Well I guess that depends on what is available in your area. It will also depend on your choices for features and unit quality.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #3  
Depends upon (a) what you're going to cut, and (b) the terrain you're going to traverse. I had two JM254s, and neither one could handle a 60" rotary cutter mowing uphill in my pastures. Mowed fine on level ground and downhill in H1. But every time I turned around at the bottom of a hill, I had to stop and shift into L3 in order to mow back up the hill. Couldn't stay in L3 all the time, cuz it was just too slow anywhere other than back uphill. So my conclusion was that 25hp was just not enough for a 5' RC on my ground. After too many hills and too much shifting, I eventually got rid of them both for a 45hp tractor and a six foot rotary cutter.

That said, if the 254 is your only option AND you have terrain like I described - you might be better off with a 48" rotary cutter.

//greg//
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #4  
I run a 5' Bush Hog on mine. No way I would go with a 4' unit because it will not get anywhere near the wheel width. I mow a lot of fence lines and this is important to me. I have had no problems running a 5' mower in stuff as tall as I am.

As for price mine is a old used Ford 60" cutter I gave $150 for used. A new one is going to start at around $700 and go up from there.

Chris
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #5  
No way I would go with a 4' unit because it will not get anywhere near the wheel width.
The fenceline concern is common, I understand that. But you might be surprised if you actually measure your rear track. A JM254 with original rims/tires has an adjustable rear track between 1070 and 1250 millimeters. That means the widest possible positioning is 49.2 inches.

//greg//
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #6  
I don't have a 254, I have a 304. That said, the 300 series are much heavier than the 200 series so the hp/weight ratio is probably fairly similar. I run a 60" rotary brush hog cutting guinea grass (think cane grass) as much as 9 feet tall up and down hills on a regular basis. Not in high range, mind you - 2L or 3L is about the best I can do for safety reasons. Some of the hills are rather steep.

I recall that I paid $600 for my Kodiak rotary new.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #7  
I run an old 5ft. heavy rough cut mower/bushog on my 254. I do not have any problems with it. I started off with light-duty a 4ft. mower/bushog and it actually did Not cut as good as the older 5ft. unit. I use L3 (H1 is too fast for my rough fields). I cut grass, weeds, small saplings/brush.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #8  
I don't ever get into high range with mine either. It is typically L1-L2, as I am mostly hill terrain and what is sort of level is not very smooth...

When I am pushing thru thick brush and sapplings(up to about 2"-3"), it is usually LL1-LL2, as I need time to modulate the FEL low over the ground looking for stumps and other obstructions that I don't want to mow over. In creeper, when the FEL finds a stump, the tractor just stops and the tires start to dig without breaking anything. Even at that, I have managed to bend my tie rod a few times:)

As for mowing alongside somthing, a 4' mower deck would force you to put the tractor wheel/fender RIGHT alongside the fence or building, with no room to maneuver. The 5' allows a few inches of clearance between tractor and object, so it is a little easier to do.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #9  
I have an 08 284 on that I use a 60" bush hog that I ordered along with my 284, on flat pasture I use L3, going up or down hill L2. All directions the pto is set at 540 with the rpm around 1300/1500. Now if I am cutting brush (anything up to 2" dia, any bigger and I use a bush saw or chain saw), I use L1 and L2 and rpm 1800 or higher if needed. For safty sake I never mow in high range (too fast ground speed for me)
At a dealer you can expect to pay $800.00 to $2000.00 depending on the brand. Check your Jinma dealer the price should be closer to the $800.00 range.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #10  
I have an 08 284 on that I use a 60" bush hog that I ordered along with my 284, on flat pasture I use L3, going up or down hill L2. All directions the pto is set at 540 with the rpm around 1300/1500
Well, confidence in your tractor and your ability both come with time and experience. But experienced owners know that their tractors and mowers operate most efficiently when the engine RPMs are actually delivering 540 RPMS at the PTO. On your Jinma, that's about 2200-2300 engine RPMS. If I used a 60' rotary cutter - at a nominal 1400 engine rpms in L3 - I'd likely fall asleep from boredom, only to be awakened occasionally by the mower choking on grass

Granted H2 and H3 in the 200 Series are all but useless for anything but road travel. But H1 actually provides usable power and speed for a 5' mower on level ground. Downhill, I could see where that might seem too fast for the inexperienced. Eventually you'll learn to use the 2-stage clutch to its advantage. But mowing level ground at 1400 rpm in L3, that's just a waste of time and fuel.

//greg//
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #11  
pto is set at 540 with the rpm around 1300/1500.

g0rd0, like Greg said, you need to have the tach up in the green arc around 2300 RPM to get the rated 540 RPM at the PTO shaft. Especially when cutting grass, you need a certain blade tip speed in order to cleanly sever the grass stalks. The gearbox on the cutter is designed to give the necessary blade speed(around 13,000 FT/MIN) when 540 RPM is applied from the PTO. Less RPM and it won't cut right. You use your gear selection to determine the speed you travel over the ground, not the throttle, that stays at full all the time you are mowing. The governor top end setting will limit the RPM to no higher than the green arc, even with the throttle lever pushed as far forward as it will go.

I slowly let out the clutch at about 1000 RPM to get the blades spinning. As soon as the first stage clutch(pto section) is fully engaged, I smoothly push the throttle lever as far forward as it will go and leave it there. The remainder of my mowing session uses just half of the clutch pedal travel to control the second stage of the clutch(drivetrain clutch) for shifting. The only time I come out of full throttle is when I am done cutting, or the temp starts to creep up because the filter screen in front of the radiator is full of debris and blocking airflow and I have to stop and clean the screen...

Force = mass X acceleration. The real power of the brushhog, especially when shredding brush and sapplings/small trees is in the energy stored in the blades at their designed RPM. At 1400 engine RPM, you are only getting half the performance out of your mower, and less than 1/2 the available HP out of your engine. Lugging a diesel engine is not healthy for it. Does your engine bog down when the material being cut gets thick? I would guess it does. The only time mine bogs down is when it gets into something like a rootwad of one of the larger sapplings/trees I have just pushed over that gets uprooted and tangled in the blades:) Simple brush and grass, it dosn't change speed very much at all...

With sharp blades, my hog delivers a pretty decent cut on grass, even when it is a little wet... Push your throttle all the way forward, i think you will be pleasantly surprised at how the cutter performs...
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #12  
The fenceline concern is common, I understand that. But you might be surprised if you actually measure your rear track. A JM254 with original rims/tires has an adjustable rear track between 1070 and 1250 millimeters. That means the widest possible positioning is 49.2 inches.

//greg//

Mine has standard R1 tires and wheels, 284 but the same thing, and I can guarantee you its wider than that. Yes, my wheels are flipped but I would guess its 5'5". Reason I say that is I have my 72" Caroni finish mower on it right now and there is maybe 4" on each side. Also in the winter I have a 6' and 7' grader blade for the 3 point. With the 6' it barely covers the wheel track strait and forget about it with the blade angled.

I am in Fresno on a flight today but will measure and confirm when I get home. I may be way off here.

Chris
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #13  
Not sure where you got your info Greg but my rears are 61 wide and the fronts are 57

Chris.
 

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/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #14  
Last pic is my tractor, 60" bucket, and my 72" Caroni finish mower.

Chris.
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #15  
Not sure where you got your info
Right straight out of the owner's manual Chris.
JM254/284;
wheelbase; 1050mm
front track; 900 mm or 950mm on reversed rims
rear track; four position adjustable from 1070mm to 1250mm

Don't know what you may have done since purchasing yours, but both my JM254s conformed exactly to those measurements above. I had mine set "wide", and a 60"' bush hog extended several inches past both rear tires. Mowing up close to a fenceline was no problem.

//greg//
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #16  
Right straight out of the owner's manual Chris.
JM254/284;
wheelbase; 1050mm
front track; 900 mm or 950mm on reversed rims
rear track; four position adjustable from 1070mm to 1250mm

Don't know what you may have done since purchasing yours, but both my JM254s conformed exactly to those measurements above. I had mine set "wide", and a 60"' bush hog extended several inches past both rear tires. Mowing up close to a fenceline was no problem.

//greg//

Imagine that, the manual is wrong. I know as a current owner they are much wide than you say.

I have done nothing other than set it to wide stance. There must be some changes since you had yours but you can clearly see my 2003 Jinma 284 is every bit of 5' wide as it sets.

You can clearly see that there is no more than 4-5" on each side of my rear tires and my 6' (72") Caroni Finish Mower. You can also see that the 5' wide bucket on my FEL is the same width as my rears and my fronts are slightly narrower.

Chris
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #17  
Here is a pic of my fronts.

Chris
 

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/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #18  
I may have partially figured this out. The Chinglish manual - as you know - can be subject to more than one interpretation. As such, I wasn't too accurate with those numbers I extracted originally. Here is the corrected version:
Wheelbase; 1645
Front; 920 or 1000
Rear; 1000 to 1300
But your measurements are all outside to outside (tire). The Jinma numbers I cite are center to center (rim). So your tractor may have wider rims/tires than mine (I had the skinny rice tires). And given that I could trim fencelines just fine with a 60" mower, I clearly didn't have my wheels set as wide as yours either.

Moral of the story is; size your mower selection to your own tractor and conditions.

//greg//
 
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/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #19  
My tires are:

Fronts=6.00x16
Rears=9.5x24

Chris
 
/ Brush Cutter for Jinma #20  
On my way to bush hog with my 5' (60") Ford cutter.

Cutter is actually 64 wide.

Chris
 

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