oldgeezer
Member
I have an L3240 & a Woods Brush Bull BB60X rotary cutter (hog). The manual for the hog shows to put "check chains" on the hog as support in the front end & this enables you to always place the tractor rear lift in the lowest position while mowing where it will allow the hog to float all the time like placing the FEL control all the way forward allows the FEL to float. Even though you run with the rear lift control all the way down the check chains keep the front of the hog from scalping & always maintain it at the same even height from the ground.
The thing is, in my case, the chains at the tractor end cannot hang straight because they hit the pto guard on the tractor. I have had chains on previous tractor-combos & never had this problem occur.
Has anyone else tried this & or solved this problem?
I really prefer the chains because by floating the front of the hog, instead of controlling the height with the lift control, you get a smoother cut with no scalping & there is no upward pressure on the rear lift when you cross ditches or any other situation where your hog tends to ride over something & cause an upward lift to the rear of the tractor. I have seen tractors hung up this way with the pull wheels held clear of the ground by a hog that has hung on a bank or a ditch.
Anybody?
OLDGEEZER
The thing is, in my case, the chains at the tractor end cannot hang straight because they hit the pto guard on the tractor. I have had chains on previous tractor-combos & never had this problem occur.
Has anyone else tried this & or solved this problem?
I really prefer the chains because by floating the front of the hog, instead of controlling the height with the lift control, you get a smoother cut with no scalping & there is no upward pressure on the rear lift when you cross ditches or any other situation where your hog tends to ride over something & cause an upward lift to the rear of the tractor. I have seen tractors hung up this way with the pull wheels held clear of the ground by a hog that has hung on a bank or a ditch.
Anybody?
OLDGEEZER