BoneDigger
Bronze Member
Is King Kutter or County Line from TS or Northern Tools considered okay? Specifically, I'm interested in the 3 pt tiller.
I have no idea if it is professional model or what. Here is a photo as you can see it has no exposed springs to adjust like the other type.Gary,
is yours the professional model ? Mine was built in August 2016 but sat in the rural king parking lot outdoors for 9 months so the slip clutch had a lot of rust so I had to disassemble it and hit it with steel wool. the tech guy at King Kutter gave me some good tips. It is easy to adjust just tighten or loosen the bolts.
I like it for the gear driven tines rather than a chain that might get slack and cause problems if not inspected frequently.
Thing is, if it's a decent built tiller in the first place, the chain drive is the better option!
The chain will take shock loads better, and most folks will NEVER wear out a chain drive.
I am coming up on two THOUSAND acres on this chain drive tiller,
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and the chain and sprockets are still original... I think I've adjusted the chain MAYBE three times in all that use. It takes all of 5 minutes...
IF you don't buy junk then you won't own junk, especially when it comes to tillers.
SR
I run a 6' King Kutter II tiller on my 34 HP, (28.3 PTO HP) tractor fineI've started looking at 3 pt tillers myself. One of the local outlets sells King Kutter brand at a pretty good price (just bought an 84" KK rake from them). Anyway, not sure what size I want, 72" or 84"? Does anyone know off hand what the pto hp requirements are? I suppose I could search KK's website, but when I was looking at info on their rakes, the site was difficult to search for specs.
Found it on a separate pdf file. Looks like 72" is 35-50 hp, which leaves me out with 32 pto hp. Don't really want to go any narrower on the tiller, but the 60" is 25-40 hp.
Is King Kutter or County Line from TS or Northern Tools considered okay? Specifically, I'm interested in the 3 pt tiller.