dbchaplin03
Silver Member
Good evening,
We just bought an acreage with 5 acres of overgrown honeysuckle and neglect. We are starting to thin it out (not clear cut) to increase the size of our yard into more of a park like setting. I have a TON of chipping and shredding to do. We are in Ohio and heat the house primarily with wood so anything over 3" will become firewood most likely.
Does anyone have hands on experience with the Wallenstein BXM32 or 42 on a 1025R? It is rated at 18hp pto which is considerably less than Wallenstein says is required for the BXM42 but it seems like a bunch of people online have claimed that the BXM42 runs good on low hp tractors and I would never be running it at max capacity anyhow.
I am the kind of person who doesn't like to buy things twice and i would rather spend $1200 more for the bigger machine now than wish i had later. I know the 1025R is a mighty small tractor but I'm an Air Force officer and we move every 2-3 years so it is the current tractor for now. I've owned 3 different Kubota's in the past at various locations we were stationed at so my tractor size could easily increase the next time we move. I just got too good of a deal to pass this one up with the loader, backhoe, drive over deck, and several other attachments when i bought this one.
Any real feedback is appreciated.
Thanks,
Chap
We just bought an acreage with 5 acres of overgrown honeysuckle and neglect. We are starting to thin it out (not clear cut) to increase the size of our yard into more of a park like setting. I have a TON of chipping and shredding to do. We are in Ohio and heat the house primarily with wood so anything over 3" will become firewood most likely.
Does anyone have hands on experience with the Wallenstein BXM32 or 42 on a 1025R? It is rated at 18hp pto which is considerably less than Wallenstein says is required for the BXM42 but it seems like a bunch of people online have claimed that the BXM42 runs good on low hp tractors and I would never be running it at max capacity anyhow.
I am the kind of person who doesn't like to buy things twice and i would rather spend $1200 more for the bigger machine now than wish i had later. I know the 1025R is a mighty small tractor but I'm an Air Force officer and we move every 2-3 years so it is the current tractor for now. I've owned 3 different Kubota's in the past at various locations we were stationed at so my tractor size could easily increase the next time we move. I just got too good of a deal to pass this one up with the loader, backhoe, drive over deck, and several other attachments when i bought this one.
Any real feedback is appreciated.
Thanks,
Chap