3 Point PTO Trencher

   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #11  
Power company’s contractor used a chain trencher to put in their 13.8Kva line 4’ deep thru rocks and roots 1/2 mile. MiniX for pull and transformer boxes.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #12  
100's of feet is nothing.

A good operator on a 5-ton class mini ex (~11,000# rubber tracked machine) can dig 150'-200' per hour in sandy soils at 3' deep.

Obviously alot of rocks, roots, or mud that sticks in the bucket are all things that can slow it down.

2' or less trencher is faster IF there are no rocks or roots and its a good trencher.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #13  
Kubota used to make a 550 chain trencher. Both 3pt and special mount for small TLBs.

Rented ones for water lines. Combination chains can saw thru big rocks and dig chert and clay with ease.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #14  
Other photo that didn't attach right.View attachment 765994
Fallon,

What is your opinion of the Bradco 612 3pt trencher? I see you running the rock/frost chain on yours in above picture.

I was seriously considering one two years ago, before prices went absolutely ludicrous, but did not pull trigger on the quote for use in the rocky ground of western NC. I was looking at the 48" depth model with two chains. Dirt with skip every station and a rock/frost chain.

I am returning to looking for a 48" trencher.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #15  
Here ya go …. From the early ‘50’s. PTO/hydraulic powered.
1665588527124.jpeg
1665588647025.jpeg
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #16  
Fallon,

What is your opinion of the Bradco 612 3pt trencher? I see you running the rock/frost chain on yours in above picture.

I was seriously considering one two years ago, before prices went absolutely ludicrous, but did not pull trigger on the quote for use in the rocky ground of western NC. I was looking at the 48" depth model with two chains. Dirt with skip every station and a rock/frost chain.

I am returning to looking for a 48" trencher.
I think I paid $2k for it 4 odd years ago. Propane company was getting rid of it. To big for small stuff & not optimized for big stuff from what I could tell. They only needed 18" & a walk behind unit for putting in residential propane tanks. Came with a spare drive gear & I think they said the chain was new. Haven't paid attention to the teeth in years. But I'm low use & wouldn't wear most anything out.

Could probably sell it for more than I paid for it these days. My ISP had been parking up to 20 rigs (directional boring, mini-ex, vac truck, cable plow) in my pasture this summer. So I'm in good with them & have access to better gear to some degree. Haven't thought to much about selling off my trencher though.

It's worked fine for some projects on my 5 acres in hard clay. Not enough for real work, but plenty fine for somebody with occasional needs & a CUT.

Frost line here in the Denver area is 36-48". So at 36" it's sketchy if this is deep enough for water line. I haven't risked it, but all my projects have been power or data lines.

Trenching is digging & I'm not insured for digging in my side gig (mostly mowing, driveway maintnance & snow). So the trencher is personal use only. Digging takes insurance from $1,600 a year for landscaping to $8k a year or something.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Fallon,

What is your opinion of the Bradco 612 3pt trencher? I see you running the rock/frost chain on yours in above picture.

I was seriously considering one two years ago, before prices went absolutely ludicrous, but did not pull trigger on the quote for use in the rocky ground of western NC. I was looking at the 48" depth model with two chains. Dirt with skip every station and a rock/frost chain.

I am returning to looking for a 48" trencher.

That’s the one that I was looking at. The website says they are back ordered through 2023.

I found a used one on FB marketplace that had been advertised for 17 weeks. He was asking $7500!!!

I contacted him to see if he still had it since the ad was so old. He did, said it had about 8 hours on it.

I was going to try to talk him down a little bit the next day, but he had sold it.
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #18  
HEY!!! I had 2 of them Jeep-a-trenchers at one time! Still have one of the auburn units on a IH 2504 that I never use. --I think the diggin chain boom is 7 or 9 feet. been extended for farm tile installations by former owner.
A word of caution on chain trenchers and roots or rocks, -----stay out of them if they are very big! You will bend the boom on these small units as they are NOT made heavy enough to stand up to it! BUY A BACKHOE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #19  
Do yourself and others a favor. Map the as builts. Meaning mark a plot map with underground utilities as accurately as possible for future use. It may be 20 yrs before you need to know exactly where it is again.
 
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   / 3 Point PTO Trencher #20  
A light weight walk behind trencher isn’t good for a lot. But a ride on trencher will dig 3ft deep and do it at twice the speed of a mini excavator. I’ve never used a 3pt trencher. But based on my experience with the ride on trencher they take more power than you’d think. If you have 40 or more HP and you buy a heavy duty model in sure it would be fine. If you already have a mini excavator and this is just a one time job I’d just use it.
 
 

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