dannyk
Silver Member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2001
- Messages
- 179
- Location
- Northern Minnesota
- Tractor
- Kubota and John Deere tractors 20-40HP; skid steer loader
Sorry if this is repetitive, but every year there are new greenhorn bush hog users (like me) hooking up there hogs for the first time. I figure repetition is good! I just bought a Southern Equipment 4-foot hog to use with my B7500 on about 8 acres of pasture. Bear with me here. /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif Here are my questions:
1. The shear bolt is 3-1/2" x 1/2". What grade bolt should I use for replacement? The mechanic who delivered it said grade 5, others say grade 2.
2. To adjust the cutting height, I assume I first adjust the rear height as desired with the bush hog gauge wheel and then adjust the front height with the tractor hydraulic lever so that the mower is level or slightly higher in the rear. The top link I assume is just set so that the hole will match to the hole in the A-frame on the front of the hog when the unit is level. (This A-frame has lock nuts on the bottom so the whole A-frame can flex slightly. There is about 4 inches of chain between the A-frame and the bar which connects to the rear of the mower.) Is there any consensus about replacing the top link with a chain, since the only purpose of the top link would be to lift the mower, and the chain would give more room to flex?
3. I further assume (lots of assumptions here since the mower did not come with any directions or manual!) that I can lift and lower the mower with the PTO spinning.
4. And I assume I should engage the PTO at about 1000 engine rpm instead of 2600 engine rpm (PTO speed) to be easier on the driveline and to avoid breaking shear pins unnecessarily.
5. I'm thinking that when I encounter sedge hillocks or anthills, that the best way to deal with them would be to back up slowly into them in order to avoid hanging up anything on the underside of the tractor. (This tractor doesn't have a great deal of ground clearance anyway, and there will be some mid-mount mower linkage still attached.)
I really appreciate the time it takes to respond and to let me know if I've said anything that is incorrect. I know that many of you veterans spend lots of time answering the same questions over and over. But I also think that it's important, especially given the limitations of the search engine for this site, to keep some of these issues near the front page.
Thanks again,
Danny
1. The shear bolt is 3-1/2" x 1/2". What grade bolt should I use for replacement? The mechanic who delivered it said grade 5, others say grade 2.
2. To adjust the cutting height, I assume I first adjust the rear height as desired with the bush hog gauge wheel and then adjust the front height with the tractor hydraulic lever so that the mower is level or slightly higher in the rear. The top link I assume is just set so that the hole will match to the hole in the A-frame on the front of the hog when the unit is level. (This A-frame has lock nuts on the bottom so the whole A-frame can flex slightly. There is about 4 inches of chain between the A-frame and the bar which connects to the rear of the mower.) Is there any consensus about replacing the top link with a chain, since the only purpose of the top link would be to lift the mower, and the chain would give more room to flex?
3. I further assume (lots of assumptions here since the mower did not come with any directions or manual!) that I can lift and lower the mower with the PTO spinning.
4. And I assume I should engage the PTO at about 1000 engine rpm instead of 2600 engine rpm (PTO speed) to be easier on the driveline and to avoid breaking shear pins unnecessarily.
5. I'm thinking that when I encounter sedge hillocks or anthills, that the best way to deal with them would be to back up slowly into them in order to avoid hanging up anything on the underside of the tractor. (This tractor doesn't have a great deal of ground clearance anyway, and there will be some mid-mount mower linkage still attached.)
I really appreciate the time it takes to respond and to let me know if I've said anything that is incorrect. I know that many of you veterans spend lots of time answering the same questions over and over. But I also think that it's important, especially given the limitations of the search engine for this site, to keep some of these issues near the front page.
Thanks again,
Danny