Steave
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2012
- Messages
- 853
- Location
- Taylorsville, GA
- Tractor
- 3000 Ford 66' 260A International Backhoe, Belarus 250AS
I should have asked: Did gravely ever build a Flail Mower.
CADPlans that some nice equipment. Got to love the gravelys. . Yours look show quality do you still use any of them.
I should have asked: Did gravely ever build a Flail Mower.
I was thinking on adding a swinging hitch on my Mott as it don't have the slot. It would be based on the design of my finish mower. Do you see any reason this wouldn't work.? It would be an easy fix.
I quoted IslandTractor so everyone would see what my question was about. Anybody have an opinion about me adding this or any reason I shouldn't.
View attachment 478283
Ok, I missed that. Sorry. Do the rear wheels have a height adjustment?
Yes they can be adjusted but I don't think that would work out so well because of the distance from the hitch to the rear tires. There is just too much if your ground is not perfectly level and mine is not that for sure. Going over any humps it would lower considerably. I think the best way for me to use it is to just hook the hitch to a drawbar on my 3 point lift arms.
Spent all of yesterday and most of Saturday finishing my tractor so it's ready (finally!) to bring up to my house. Spent a couple of hours getting the flail mower ready to go (JD 25A). Had 4 shattered knives, mostly around the center. That should have clued me in. I replaced them, greased everything, noticed the rear roller needs new bearings but the bearings for the drum are still good. (whew!)
I hook it all up to the 3pt hitch, keep the RPM very low and feather the clutch a bit so it spins up very slowly, now I know why four center knives were shattered. Upon closer inspection, it appears that the previous owner may have clipped an immobile object with the leading edge of the mower, as it's bowed in ever so slightly- but just enough for some of the center knives to make contact once they spin out with force.
Debating the best way to bend it back. If its' rusty enough (maybe?) it may just bend easily. If not, it'll take a lot of heat with the O/A torch and lots of persuasion. Or, as a last resort, take the plasma cutter and cut a vertical line in the center to relieve the pressure from the bend, pull it back out one side at a time, and then weld/plate it for more strength. Anyone have thoughts on this?
No pics, it was pouring rain for a good part of the day, I was soaked, covered in grease and grass clippings, and was overall in a bad mood after my grease gun exploded all over the place. That was interesting...

Somebody built a flail for a Gravely,,, I have considered converting a tiller to a flail,,,
the tiller is pretty close,,, The speed might need changed,,,
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I have a couple of those tillers,,, Hmmm,,
Some bearings, a roller,,,
Just belt drive a new shaft to speed it up,,, steal a few knives off the 390,,,,, :confused2:
Lot of pressure on those grease guns and most of use don't think much about it. I know I don't. Sounds like to me either way you mentioned about straightened out your bent deck is worth a try. Try the easiest one first. I have a small dent on the rear of mine and tried hammering it out but it's built pretty tough. It did move some so I just left it for now. Unlike yours it don't interfer with the operation.
On the bent part there's no good way to get a porta power set up to help as there's nothing opposite to press against. Can't push against the cutting shaft (rotor) without causing more problems. So I guess it's BFH time.
Yep, you're not kidding. It sure made for a miserable rest of the day. I'll try hitting it with a BFH and some heat. Barring that, I may be able to weld a triangle of steel (if I can find any scrap) coming off the back side and use a come-along to pull it back out past straight so it'll spring back to centered. Either way, I think it may need something sturdy on the leading edge to prevent this from happening again. Thanks!
How about just drilling a 3/8" hole in the middle of the bend, attaching a eye bolt and pulling on the it? Just leave it open afterwards or weld it closed.
That's a good idea, I may just try that first. I'll have to set it against something solid enough that I can pull hard to bend it back straight but not damage the mower.