KennedyDiesel
Veteran Member
Do yourself a favor and add the skid steer attachment option and the appropriate width Worksite Pro Foundry bucket.
Team_Green said:Some people just use thier units to move soil and such. not for digging. why force a heavy bucket on them? If you want to beat on your machine have at it, just buy what you need. I use my units harder then they should be but i also expect some "wear" that most would be unhappy with.
JasonMac said:John Deere Shouldn't even offer the standard bucket in my opinion...
I am skeptical of that weight. My 72" Mahindra bucket is 3/16 body and sides, 1/2 x 6" edge and weighs 400#. It is pretty tuf since it has some contouring on the sides and top for strength as well as three 1/2x 4" pieces of strap metal welded front to back on the bottom. It stands up to the forces applied by my 7520 with loaded AGs fairly well. I am looking toward adding about 40# to strategic locations. Another factor in bucket durability is the stength of the metal they use in construction. Stronger metal yields a lighter bucket but you run the risk of having it break if its bent much.dfkrug said:I agree. I was just demoing the 4720 with 400cx loader. That std bkt is
a joke, with only 1/8" unreinforced steel sides and lip. Kubota's std bkts
are not very good either. Both offer HD bkts at least.
My Kioti std (only) bkt OTOH has 1/2" total thickness reinforced sides, the
top lip is double laminated, and the cutting edge is 5/8"x4.75". Total weight
for the 60-in bkt is 180#. Excellent design.
dfkrug said:My Kioti std (only) bkt OTOH has 1/2" total thickness reinforced sides, the
top lip is double laminated, and the cutting edge is 5/8"x4.75". Total weight
for the 60-in bkt is 180#. Excellent design.
Dargo said:I do quite a bit of heavy metal working and I must be misunderstanding your description. I've worked on some huge end loaders that hold over 8 cubic yards of material and the sides on them were only 1/2" and they held up well. If you have much depth and height to the 60" bucket you describe, I come up with a bucket weight of well over 1200 pounds that would be more suited for a really large excavator than a tractor.