JWR
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,990
- Location
- So MD / WV
- Tractor
- MF 2660 LP, 3 Kubota B2150, Kubota BX2200, MH Pacer, Gravely 5660, etc.
Pburchett -- you are going to get endless free advice on this one. Here's my view: (having read all 4 pages of replies to date)
1) Forget the 60 some inch width. If you are on steep ground anything similar to what I mow in WV you need all the tread width you can get. Until you get into the larger (above 50hp) orange ones, the universal complaint among steep ground bush hoggers is that you can't get Kubota wheels spread enough. A friend has an L3400 using a 5ft hog and they did not feel safe on it at all without adding rear spacers. Photo attached.
2) I used a 48hp JD 4wd with a 6ft MX6 hog for 10 years and it was a perfect match in my opinion. No way I'd go below a 40 or 45hp to run a 6ft hog if you mow anything more than grass. I cut some awfully heavy woodyplants head high and so dense you could not walk thru it with that rig. Sometimes small thorn trees, sometimes just briars and weeds. Rear tires spaced 78" at outer edge to just clear trailer I had. Good on the steep too.
3) Individuals have preferences but I know no one cutting steep ground with a 6ft hog using hydrostatic drive. I never want to. The stick shift gives you better control on steep spots, more power to the wheels and PTO from whatever size engine you have, and I say longer life and reliability. Guys talking "crash box" std trans are talking old machines. All the newer ones have syncromesh transmissions. In the size tractor you are considering you should get either 8 or 12 speeds which beats heck out of 3 hydro ranges (some of which will sit there and hum against a steep hill with heavy hog and good traction instead of moving on.) Yuk. But that is just my view.
4) So I vote for at least 45hp, at least 6ft rear tire width at outer edges (more is better), go to a large enough Kubota where you can widen the rear wheels enough or else use the spacers, and stick with a std transmission. For your loader work I loved the power reverser on the JD4700 & newer Kubotas have power shuttle transmissions too.
Final comment: you want the safest machine you can put under you for the work you do. That means good brakes, very wide wheel spacing, and low center of gravity.
1) Forget the 60 some inch width. If you are on steep ground anything similar to what I mow in WV you need all the tread width you can get. Until you get into the larger (above 50hp) orange ones, the universal complaint among steep ground bush hoggers is that you can't get Kubota wheels spread enough. A friend has an L3400 using a 5ft hog and they did not feel safe on it at all without adding rear spacers. Photo attached.

2) I used a 48hp JD 4wd with a 6ft MX6 hog for 10 years and it was a perfect match in my opinion. No way I'd go below a 40 or 45hp to run a 6ft hog if you mow anything more than grass. I cut some awfully heavy woodyplants head high and so dense you could not walk thru it with that rig. Sometimes small thorn trees, sometimes just briars and weeds. Rear tires spaced 78" at outer edge to just clear trailer I had. Good on the steep too.
3) Individuals have preferences but I know no one cutting steep ground with a 6ft hog using hydrostatic drive. I never want to. The stick shift gives you better control on steep spots, more power to the wheels and PTO from whatever size engine you have, and I say longer life and reliability. Guys talking "crash box" std trans are talking old machines. All the newer ones have syncromesh transmissions. In the size tractor you are considering you should get either 8 or 12 speeds which beats heck out of 3 hydro ranges (some of which will sit there and hum against a steep hill with heavy hog and good traction instead of moving on.) Yuk. But that is just my view.
4) So I vote for at least 45hp, at least 6ft rear tire width at outer edges (more is better), go to a large enough Kubota where you can widen the rear wheels enough or else use the spacers, and stick with a std transmission. For your loader work I loved the power reverser on the JD4700 & newer Kubotas have power shuttle transmissions too.
Final comment: you want the safest machine you can put under you for the work you do. That means good brakes, very wide wheel spacing, and low center of gravity.