Ranger1969
Member
Working leveling out 2 acres so I bought a land leveler to assist a dozer that was doing the heaving lifting/cutting. I paid 1250 for the leveler and another 250 for cylinder/hose. I had never used one before so the 40 hours I spent were a learning experience on how to use it and what it's not good at! The tractor is a NH TD5050 with 95HP 4WD. It is well matched to the 10' bucket and can pull a full bucket and drag more in front. A full bucket holds almost 2 yards of dirt. If you are running a 2 wheel tractor I would go with an 8' bucket(for that size of tractor without weight on the wheels).
The dozer was doing a lot of long pushes and would leave a "dirt windrow." Typically I would run behind him to clean up. The land leveler does a good job at pulling loose dirt. It will also "cut" for a short period 10' or so until the bucket fills to a certain level then it will just drag/float. I had played around with adding weight boxes to the top of the bucket to give it more down pressure. That is on the to do list someday. You can move dirt but it's a slow process. It is effective on small areas/jobs. It also works on leveling roads. I ran it on ours several times and they showed big improvements. It's not as smooth as a double blade road grader but not bad. Be glad to answer questions.






The dozer was doing a lot of long pushes and would leave a "dirt windrow." Typically I would run behind him to clean up. The land leveler does a good job at pulling loose dirt. It will also "cut" for a short period 10' or so until the bucket fills to a certain level then it will just drag/float. I had played around with adding weight boxes to the top of the bucket to give it more down pressure. That is on the to do list someday. You can move dirt but it's a slow process. It is effective on small areas/jobs. It also works on leveling roads. I ran it on ours several times and they showed big improvements. It's not as smooth as a double blade road grader but not bad. Be glad to answer questions.





