Overtaxed
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2016
- Messages
- 371
- Location
- Gaffney, SC
- Tractor
- Kioti NX6010, JD 2720 w/46BH, Honda Pioneer 1000
For those who are following along, my search for a PTO mulcher has finally resulted in a purchase of.. Not a PTO mulcher.
After a bunch of research, I spoke with Baumalight (about both their mulchers and their rotary) and settled on the Brushcutt. I got the Brushcutt last week and was finally able to get it out for some testing this weekend. Here's the original discussion that led me to the Brushcutt:
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/attachments/394381-pto-mulcher.html
And here's the unit I purchased:
BaumaLight - Brush Cutt 3 Point Hitch Models
I'm running this on a Kioti NX6010 (50HP PTO), and have an EA 72" rotary already, which I mention as a comparison only because both are rotary cutters. The similarity stops there however, I love my EA, but, at less than 1/2 the price, it shouldn't compare to the CP560 and it doesn't.
I bought the cutter from James River Equipment, a big dealer in my area, and they were great to deal with, but had never seen one of them in person, so couldn't offer a lot of feedback on the quality or capabilities that wasn't already online. The guy I bought from, however, personally had a Baumalight generator and was very happy with it, so that gave me a little comfort in the purchase process. Also, I'd spoken to Baumalight at length, including sending over pictures of what I wanted to clear and how I expected to use the device, so I was pretty confident that it would do what I needed.
This unit is nothing like a "normal" rotary, or at least no normal rotary I've ever seen. It's very heavy for it's size, and the thickness of everything is much higher than the EA cutter I have already. Also, it has a big push bar in the back and chains in the front (with an open back), it's really designed, IMHO, to be used in reverse primarily; it works fine pulling it forward too, but the whole point of this is to cut down trees that I'd prefer not to run over with my tractor, so "reverse" is the order of the day with this unit. I would typically back over the tree, cut it, knock it down, and then reposition to get it in the right spot to eat it up.
Eat it up? Yes. If you hit stuff with this right, it does a darn acceptable job of "mulching" the remains of the tree. If you've ever seen how a Diamond Mower works, it's like that (but, of course, on a smaller/less terrifying scale). You get the tree in the right spot (which is the right hand side of the mower when your looking at it from the back) and it'll just suck the whole thing in and out flies pieces of tree. First, it's really fun, but second, it leaves a very reasonable size of debris, they will be gone in a year or 2, not years like if you just left tress on the ground. Basically turns a tree into sticks. Most of the trees I'm taking down are 10-15' high, you can see some idea in the pictures I've attached; mix of hard and soft wood. The area I'm working was logged about 15 years ago, so all of these trees are the regrowth from that logging operation. I'm mostly cutting trails and opening the canopy, trying to make room for the biggest trees to grow up faster and make the area more walkable; I'm not trying to make this a lawn, think more "right of way" than front lawn.
Overall, I'm very happy so far, this isn't a mulcher, but, for my purposes, it seems to be a perfect tool to do the work at a fraction of the cost, both initial purchase as well as the consumables (no carbide teeth, just big steel blades to replace). I've only used it about 5 hours so far, so take this as an initial impressions, I'm sure I'll get better at it and be able to comment more on the reliability as I put more time on it. I'm clearing the undergrowth across probably 10-15 acres, so I'll spend some time with this machine, and always do my best to break things, so I'll do my best to give it a good run and provide my opinions.
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/attachments/394381-pto-mulcher.html
And here's the unit I purchased:
BaumaLight - Brush Cutt 3 Point Hitch Models
I'm running this on a Kioti NX6010 (50HP PTO), and have an EA 72" rotary already, which I mention as a comparison only because both are rotary cutters. The similarity stops there however, I love my EA, but, at less than 1/2 the price, it shouldn't compare to the CP560 and it doesn't.
I bought the cutter from James River Equipment, a big dealer in my area, and they were great to deal with, but had never seen one of them in person, so couldn't offer a lot of feedback on the quality or capabilities that wasn't already online. The guy I bought from, however, personally had a Baumalight generator and was very happy with it, so that gave me a little comfort in the purchase process. Also, I'd spoken to Baumalight at length, including sending over pictures of what I wanted to clear and how I expected to use the device, so I was pretty confident that it would do what I needed.
This unit is nothing like a "normal" rotary, or at least no normal rotary I've ever seen. It's very heavy for it's size, and the thickness of everything is much higher than the EA cutter I have already. Also, it has a big push bar in the back and chains in the front (with an open back), it's really designed, IMHO, to be used in reverse primarily; it works fine pulling it forward too, but the whole point of this is to cut down trees that I'd prefer not to run over with my tractor, so "reverse" is the order of the day with this unit. I would typically back over the tree, cut it, knock it down, and then reposition to get it in the right spot to eat it up.
Eat it up? Yes. If you hit stuff with this right, it does a darn acceptable job of "mulching" the remains of the tree. If you've ever seen how a Diamond Mower works, it's like that (but, of course, on a smaller/less terrifying scale). You get the tree in the right spot (which is the right hand side of the mower when your looking at it from the back) and it'll just suck the whole thing in and out flies pieces of tree. First, it's really fun, but second, it leaves a very reasonable size of debris, they will be gone in a year or 2, not years like if you just left tress on the ground. Basically turns a tree into sticks. Most of the trees I'm taking down are 10-15' high, you can see some idea in the pictures I've attached; mix of hard and soft wood. The area I'm working was logged about 15 years ago, so all of these trees are the regrowth from that logging operation. I'm mostly cutting trails and opening the canopy, trying to make room for the biggest trees to grow up faster and make the area more walkable; I'm not trying to make this a lawn, think more "right of way" than front lawn.
Overall, I'm very happy so far, this isn't a mulcher, but, for my purposes, it seems to be a perfect tool to do the work at a fraction of the cost, both initial purchase as well as the consumables (no carbide teeth, just big steel blades to replace). I've only used it about 5 hours so far, so take this as an initial impressions, I'm sure I'll get better at it and be able to comment more on the reliability as I put more time on it. I'm clearing the undergrowth across probably 10-15 acres, so I'll spend some time with this machine, and always do my best to break things, so I'll do my best to give it a good run and provide my opinions.
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