I'm buying a Yanmar YT235. It will be my first tractor and I would like some opinions on what size rotary cutter/brush hog to buy.
The dealership has Ironcraft(aka Titan) and the 72" is rated for 30-50 PTO HP. The tractor has 27.
My problem is that I'm getting wheel spacers(I don't like how narrow these newer tractors are, especially since I'm getting a cab) so the 60" won't cover the footprint.
I'm assuming these manufacturers are rounding up required horsepower(to cover their butts and for a nice round number), but there's no way to know. Do you guys think I'll be ok with the 6 footer?
Alternatively, I could get a 5 footer and adjust the 3 point to run it to one side. I'd need to get it 4ish inches over to cover the wheel, though I'd like to get it further it possible. I've seen older threads talking about doing this but no one has said exactly how far they've managed to move it over. I know it will vary by tractor, but I wonder what I could reasonably expect?
I'd really prefer the 6' option, but I also want it to work properly.
Thanks!
I have the same 6' cutter (Titan) with a Branson sticker on it (Titan made them for Branson). I've owned it for 6 1/2 years. I'm using it on a cabbed 37 hp tractor, with 32 hp at the pto. I do have a hydro trans, and that is really what makes this combo work well for me.
Yours will probably look strikingly similar ( other than color maybe). You are correct that heavy, thick grass will cause you to need to slow down (not the grass in pic, that was "easy" and ran at "full speed"). If you are mowing your own pastures only, it will be fine. Especially once you knock it down once or twice. I think even your 27 hp at the pto will do just fine. Especially if you can take your time the first time or two.
If you're soft headed like me, and mow other people's pastures for hire, it's going to get beat up. It's just not designed to take a beating. The deck metal is on the thin side, and the gearbox is pretty small. Regardless of what Titan calls it now (it was listed as "medium duty" I think when I bought mine), it is strictly a light duty cutter. This first upper picture is actually on the first "hired" job I did with mine. Note how "pretty" it is? When I mowed my own pasture only, it was easy to get it (pasture), and keep it free from debris. The funny thing is, when folks are "hiring" their fields mowed, they seem to have an amazing assortment of debris, rock piles, concrete piles, pallets, car parts, old rolls of fence wire and posts, piles of rotten wood and tree stumps (I'm probably forgetting a few things).
Lets see if I have a recent close up:
Not as recent as I'd hoped. See the sides? Top of deck? If you can zoom it in, you can see the "character", lol. It's got more character now. But it has mowed through some impressive junk to date (one of my favorite pics):
The weeds above are 10' high, towering over my cab. I'm mowing through this in a full width pass, with the bucket down in front of me and just pushing it over like a bow wave and mowing it. This pass was done at a fast walk, which was as fast as I was comfortable in knocking down that solid wall that I couldn't see into.
This pic was same job, just a little sooner around on the same pass. You can see my first pass cut on the right side of the tractor. That was also taken as a full width pass, and at a fast walking speed.
This was with 32 pto hp. You may have to slow down a bit more frequently when it gets thick than I would have, but if it's your own land, once you cut it down, it should be much easier to maintain.
Most of my customers only want cut once a year or two, so you won't have to deal with the same out of control weeds once you get going.
As to the cutter itself? I can't believe it still runs. When I bought it originally, it was ONLY going to be used on my own land, and maybe one neighbor. So I figured this light duty cutter would be fine (and it was). But I have to give it credit, I have not broken one. single. thing. on this cutter. I've been through fists full of shear pins, to be sure, but never broken the cutter itself. Still on original blades, and I've never (and don't intend to) sharpened them either.
My 2 cents running the identical 6' cutter you're considering.