Thanks Mark & WC, this makes me wonder if I should have gotten a model with a slip clutch. But I have been told me that if you don't use the cutter with the slip clutch enough that the slip clutch can rust together.
Pretty true. No lines is considered Gr2. 307A is softer than grade 2Softer bolt has fewer lines. Softest bolts have no lines.
I much prefer shear bolts. My bh has a slip clutch and shear bolt. I keep the slip clutch tight and just let the shear take it if I hit something. I keep some extras on hand in the shop. I just get some regular bolts from hardware. As mentioned previously, be sure the bolt is long enough to not have the threaded part in the hole otherwise it will wear the hole out. To change it just line it up, knock the piece out with a punch, and put a new one in. Also, don't tighten the nut down too much. It needs to be a bit loose to shear properly.
Thanks for your help When I line it up do I need to disconect the PTO to turn the shaft on the bush hog?
Are you asking about disconnecting from the tractor? You don't need to if you have live pto - should spin freely. The best way to line it up is to just block or have someone hold the bush hog blades so it doesn't turn the bush hog shaft when you are rotating the pto shaft. Or just rotate it with quick little jerks until you get it lined up.
I have seen the shaft slide a bit to the front or back on the bush hog shaft, so just be aware of that.
Hope this helps. It's easy. Once you've done it a couple of times, it'll be old hat![]()