I bought a new 6' disk harrow with 20" blades. I wish I had got the 16" blades. We have a lot of uneven ground at the camp. I can't lift the 20" blades as high and the disk drags the ground when crossing a low spot. I never had that problem with my old disk with 16" blades.
Hi,
just curious. Here is mine.
I bought a backhoe with my B2910 Kubota about 15 years ago. One bucket was included. Any size. The second was paid for.
I chose 16 & 10 buckets.
I now realize a 24 and 16 would have made more sense. Live and learn.
For soil conditions here the 10 does not let the clay soil drop out freely. I do not even use the 10 when digging stumps anymore. The 16 is not much different.
Just wondering if if I am the only one that learned a lesson after the fact...
BTW - - one unwritten law out here in the wild west - - you ain't never gonna find ANY used implements of any kind. So, suck it up, and be prepared to buy new. Same with a tractor. I swear to God - the written law says - "all used tractors and used implement must be transported EAST of the Mississippi before being offer for sale".
Yes - I have an implement "suggestion" for all those manufacturers. Quit trying to impress the weekend yuppy "farmer" by powder coating your implements. Yes, they are shiny and look good sitting back there on the 3-point OR up front on the FEL. But powder coat has a bad habit of chipping - which leads directly to rust - which looks "really neat" sitting in and amongst the remaining powder coat. Looks a lot like seagull crap on top of a freshly fried egg.
For God's sake - use a good automotive paint and be done with it - already.
BTW there John - your two added laws apply here, west of the Mississippi also.
I've done that plenty of times and am still doing it.Buying used is not always possible.
In my area of the Northeast a person could wait years for a specific implement/size to show up used,
Yup, looked for 2 years for a good used rototiller or a good used plow, finally bought a new plow. Then plows started falling out of the woodwork. Good looking ones every week on CL. But a couple of months later a good 5' KK tiller turned up on CL for less than half price new.It's not any better east of the Mississippi, though there a couple added provisions to your law:
- In the event a used tractor or implement is available for sale, it must be either so thoroughly trashed as to be unusable, or it must be advertised at 90% or more of the price of a new tractor or implement of similar design. (Exceptions may be granted for used implements for which I have no use.)
- Used tractors or implements in good condition may be sold at bargain basement prices only after I have spent at least 2 years looking, and then given up and bought new.
I've got powder coating coming off in sheets, which made it easier to repaint.Yes - I have an implement "suggestion" for all those manufacturers. Quit trying to impress the weekend yuppy "farmer" by powder coating your implements. Yes, they are shiny and look good sitting back there on the 3-point OR up front on the FEL. But powder coat has a bad habit of chipping - which leads directly to rust - which looks "really neat" sitting in and amongst the remaining powder coat. Looks a lot like seagull crap on top of a freshly fried egg.
For God's sake - use a good automotive paint and be done with it - already.
BTW there John - your two added laws apply here, west of the Mississippi also.

Not a tractor implement but my biggest regret so far is my barely used Stihl 088, 120CC's of power, w bar and chains and carrying cases for $450.
Rarely get to use it, but when I do it's there.
So far the closest to a regret I've come is buying a 72" EA Severe XTreme Box Blade Category V2 I bought a little over a year ago.
While it's high quality and works very well, after having used it several times on a few different projects I've realized I probably could/should have bought a heavier model that has a hinged back.
On the other hand, if it hadn't been a necessity to use an implement I'd borrowed I would very much be regretting the purchase of a quick hitch from Harbor Freight. That thing has given me a whole new level of appreciation for the telescoping lower link ends on my L3560.
I find I can hook up an implement with the L3560's standard 3pt links far more quickly and easily than I can with the quick hitch. Trying to align the vertical plane of the quick hitch to the plane of the implement's pins when neither the tractor nor the implement is on level ground takes me far longer (and is far more frustrating) than just being able to get the lower link ends "close enough" and then manually extending/maneuvering which ever links need to shift in order to hookup the implement I'll be using.
And then you may break it is doing heavy work too.......
The solution is a tractor for each important implement![]()
Sub Soiler. I bought it with the intent to rip trenches for laying cable or conduit, but I'm not sure it's the right tool. I've heard that narrow trenching buckets (4" or so) can be difficult to keep from getting dirt packed in them. Is there a single solid ripper tooth/claw for a BH?