bdhsfz6
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2015
- Messages
- 3,543
- Location
- Northeastern Pennsylvania
- Tractor
- Kubota MX5800 HST & L6060 HSTC Formerly L6060 HST B7100 HST, L2550, L3010 HST, L3430 HST
Goes without saying.Don't forget the jack stands!
Goes without saying.Don't forget the jack stands!
Flail Nation - I have a few questions: is there a flail that could solve my problems. My tractor is 25HP, which may be modifiable, but we'll start bone stock. I cut small fields as a side business, and have had issues with cutting:
- The tractor handles a 5ft bush hog OK, but thick grass slows me WAY down.
- The dust and chaff thats kicked up clogs my lungs. Poison Ivy is a bumper crop up here in NH and each summer I'm covered in the rashes. A cab machine is what I want and need, but won't happen for a while at least.
So - will a 5ft flail take less power, potentially cut faster and will it create less dust/chaff?
My experience with your size tractor has been with a 5' hog on it will take less power than a 5' flail in tall fields although once the field becomes more manageable the flail rules . . . as far as your malady is concerned the flail by far is the best because they contain the clippings much better and the cut is far superior.Flail Nation - I have a few questions: is there a flail that could solve my problems. My tractor is 25HP, which may be modifiable, but we'll start bone stock. I cut small fields as a side business, and have had issues with cutting:
- The tractor handles a 5ft bush hog OK, but thick grass slows me WAY down.
- The dust and chaff thats kicked up clogs my lungs. Poison Ivy is a bumper crop up here in NH and each summer I'm covered in the rashes. A cab machine is what I want and need, but won't happen for a while at least.
So - will a 5ft flail take less power, potentially cut faster and will it create less dust/chaff?
At your rated Tractor PTO Hp a 5ft flail may be a bit underpowered for your use.Flail Nation - I have a few questions: is there a flail that could solve my problems. My tractor is 25HP, which may be modifiable, but we'll start bone stock. I cut small fields as a side business, and have had issues with cutting:
- The tractor handles a 5ft bush hog OK, but thick grass slows me WAY down.
- The dust and chaff thats kicked up clogs my lungs. Poison Ivy is a bumper crop up here in NH and each summer I'm covered in the rashes. A cab machine is what I want and need, but won't happen for a while at least.
So - will a 5ft flail take less power, potentially cut faster and will it create less dust/chaff?
At your rated Tractor PTO Hp a 5ft flail may be a bit underpowered for your use.




Yup, as always it depends. Reclaiming overgrown stuff or tall green grass is the hardest and requires more HP, or smaller bites and slower speed. But if you are maintaining, you can run as big a flail as the tractor will lift. It is all about how much material you have to move through it.Maybe, maybe not - depends on type of flails, I think hammer VS. side slicer quite a different power usage.
Ford 1310 has 19 hp engine and is very capable running 5 ft Ford 917L flail mower with the 96 x side slicer flails it was designed for.
This mower was designed as a light duty model, to be used with side slicers only and it works well as intended.
May 2021 - pretty tall stuff due to wet spring.
Obviously need to mow more often for sure, but the ground had been way too wet previously.
View attachment 790732View attachment 790734View attachment 790735View attachment 790736
Cheers
My thinking as a side business it's hard to control what and when you cut and that little extra to power thru makes a difference.Maybe, maybe not - depends on type of flails, I think hammer VS. side slicer quite a different power usage.
Ford 1310 has 19 hp engine and is very capable running 5 ft Ford 917L flail mower with the 96 x side slicer flails it was designed for.
This mower was designed as a light duty model, to be used with side slicers only and it works well as intended.
May 2021 - pretty tall stuff due to wet spring.
Obviously need to mow more often for sure, but the ground had been way too wet previously.
View attachment 790732View attachment 790734View attachment 790735View attachment 790736
Cheers
Flail Nation - I have a few questions: is there a flail that could solve my problems. My tractor is 25HP, which may be modifiable, but we'll start bone stock. I cut small fields as a side business, and have had issues with cutting:
- The tractor handles a 5ft bush hog OK, but thick grass slows me WAY down.
- The dust and chaff thats kicked up clogs my lungs. Poison Ivy is a bumper crop up here in NH and each summer I'm covered in the rashes. A cab machine is what I want and need, but won't happen for a while at least.
So - will a 5ft flail take less power, potentially cut faster and will it create less dust/chaff?
My setup and observations are identical. The flail just loudly hums along except for the annoying rattling of the scraper blade. Rarely use the RC.I use a Caroni TM1900BSC with my Kubota L4600. I haven't used my 6' rotary cutter since I got this years ago. Power wise I can't even tell that that the flail is running. I use it in my orchards, paths and mowing down cover crops. Great machine. My only complaint is that there is always a scraggly row leftover from the tire in higher weeds (although if I go slower it's very minor).
Thanks guys - great advice. Seriously thinking about upgrading to the flail, not only for the cut quality but for the power too. I wish I decided on a flail vs the finish mower when I bought.My thinking as a side business it's hard to control what and when you cut and that little extra to power thru makes a difference.
I've been running a 48" HD flail with hammers on my Yanmar with 23Hp at the pto (just past 1/2 throttle) mostly on brush up to about 2" and it chews the hell out of it laying down a beautiful carpet of mulch in it's wake.Thanks guys - great advice. Seriously thinking about upgrading to the flail, not only for the cut quality but for the power too. I wish I decided on a flail vs the finish mower when I bought.
In tall grass I have to crawl so slow that I'm barely moving. I have 2 customers that have fields that stay wet in some areas and that gets to be a little precarious. Don't want to stop.
As to the quote above, this is absolutely the truth. The fields I cut are typically maintained once or twice a year, have heavy grass growth and plenty of obstacles / rocks. I cut when the request comes in and schedule allows for dry weather. The hog is rugged enough for the terrain but makes a lousy cut, the finish mower gets beat to heck, but does a much nicer job. Both stir up a cloud of chaff/dust/particulate and since I can't go very fast, it surrounds the tractor. I look like Pigpen.