theonlybull, thanks for you concern on the ROPS. The truck tire and wheel idea sounds great, but the tractor is 4wd, so I doubt I could find something that keeps my front to rear ratio the same. But its worth a few phone calls. (my rears are 22").
So I fell to page four this time....is this the natural progression in the death of a thread? slow and painful?
I've had 5-6 hours of seat time on the tractor in the last week. Its fescue seeding season here, and I still had roughly 3/4 acre of mud showing and I wasn't going to miss an opportunity to cover it up!
The plan was to use the tiller to 'scarify' the ground again, like I did last spring. But I ran into a real headache...since installing the PTO clutch, my tiller shaft was too long. First, I tried to take the clutch off. It's the roll pin type though, and I quickly decided that was a pain in the ***. So I tried to cut the shaft. The hacksaw wouldn't touch this thing, I had to take it to a welder friend that could cut it down. Three trips back to him to get it right, and lots of banging and pushing on the tiller and I finally got the darn thing to work with the clutch still in place. I'm telling you...I spent about 5-6 hours on this "project".


Good news, all my current implements now work without removing the clutch. Bad news, this tiller shaft is now cut down to about 2.5" of overlap!

There is only a quarter inch of travel needed for the tiller, and the welder friend feels confident that it's a high grade steel and will not fail. I figure, even if it fails it was worth the attempt.
Here's a shot of the shaft before cutting down. I never said it was pretty.
And here's a shot showing the tiller on the tractor. You can see, it's darn near direct drive with the clutch on!
With the tiller finally back in place, I was able to start my seeding. When I did it last spring, I had set the tiller to about 2" depth. That proved to only be about 50% successful. This time, I decided to till all of it down 4". The hard clay beat the **** out of the tiller, but it did a great job! Here's a tip from your uncle Tony, a benefit of a $250 japanese tiller is that it is much easier to beat on than a $2000 tiller!
I tilled down 4", used the walk behind seed spreader to spread and since I don't have a chain harrow, I just made another pass with the tiller to "cover" the seed.
Here's a few shots of working up the lower pasture area. Eddie, if you're still reading, I remember you asking for an action shot of this. 6 months later, here it is.
Hopefully, mother nature will cooperate more this fall than she did in the spring... We've had a rain cloud over the house for a week now with not a drop of rain. I'm not going to be stingy with the sprinkler this time though.
On another note, the battery that came with the tractor gave up the ghost. It was junk from day one, as most of the Yanmars are probably sold with. So I had a deep cycle battery here for my boats trolling motor. I put it in as a temporary solution. Wouldn't you know, it seems to have solved what I thought was a bad regulator. Seems like a junk battery was my issue all along. So, I'm going to stick with this one....the boat doesn't get out enough anyway!