IslandTractor
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2005
- Messages
- 15,802
- Location
- Prudence Island, RI
- Tractor
- 2007 Kioti DK40se HST, Woods BH
Been a while since I posted the note below, but I just got around to doing a complete conversion to Flailmaster clevises and blades on my Caroni 1900. After busting a few more Caroni clevises mulching up some thicker/rougher stuff, I just wasn't willing to keep spending the ridiculous money on the Agri Supply Caroni parts.
Changes/observations from when I mocked up the parts earlier:
- Grinding is necessary, but relatively little - and even after doing so, the Flailmaster clevis is still more substantial than the Caroni/Agri Supply clevis. I initially didn't think it would be necessary, as the lone clevis I modified swung without interference. Turns out - it's extremely close, and the tabs on the drum are not very uniform. Some of the tabs are slightly narrower than others, so the clevises wouldn't swing completely free on all of them. Taking off 1/6" or so per side made the modified clevises swing freely on all the tabs.
- My neighbor who has years more experience than I with such things suggested another change. He looked at some of the legs that remained from the broken clevises and suggested relieving the blade holes with a conical grinder head. His point being, that the edges of the blade holes are quite sharp and the material is hardened, and he could see where the sharp corners had worked their way through the Caroni clevises. While the Flailmaster clevises are far beefier, I still relieved all the top edges of the blade holes to hopefully reduce this effect.
- Rather than using a bolt/nut to squeeze the Flailmaster clevises together to fit between the drum tabs, a good sized vice did the trick very quickly. Basically, just squeeze the ears together until you can just get a blade to slide over them.
The whole conversion took a couple hours. I've about 2 hours mowing since doing so, all seems fine - works as well as before. I've got a job next week that will have me mowing some heavier brush and will report back on how these hold up.
As an aside...I've got over 20 used original Caroni clevises that are certainly serviceable. If anyone is interested in them, I'll let them go far cheaper than new...
<img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/files/attachments/377666-lets-talk-flail-mowers-relievedblade-jpg"/><img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/files/attachments/377667-lets-talk-flail-mowers-assembly-1-jpg"/><img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/files/attachments/377668-lets-talk-flail-mowers-assembly-2-jpg"/>
Really a great contribution. I tried to grind down a larger clevis a few years ago but gave up as I thought the ears were too thin by the time it fit. I hadn't thought of compressing the ears a bit.
Of course the real solution is to find a source for metric clevises. I tried but found nothing when I last checked. Even the specialty metric fastener stores didn't carry them. I'm pretty sure these are not specially made clevises, just a metric size.
I've been using the Flailmaster blades for years. They are just as good as the Caroni versions. I lose blades because the clevises break. Never had to replace any blade because of wear.