Wagtail, the previous owner had said that he had to buy a new shaft because he couldn't get U-joints for the previous one. Although he seemed like an honest guy it's hard to say what the real story is: clearly, it was disingenuous for him to make this point as it inferred that it was a good shaft, and, clearly, it was not. Yeah, not going to use this one to spec out a new one: I've talked to a local tractor dealer and they told me to bring it in- I told them NO.
Rick, I may take you up on your offer. Shipping, however, is likely going to bump things up in cost; and, once I figure out which way to go on this I'll likely be running more behind, time-wise (I have to what to see what the turnaround time is for ordering locally).
What are people's thoughts about a series 6 here vs a series 4? EricTheOracle is running his Woods BXX7200 off his NX6010HST using a series 4 PTO: he's fairly aggressive with things, so I figure that if a series 4 shaft holds up for him then I'd figure it would for me. It might be the shaft that came with my cutter was so far gone/abused that I'm overly paranoid. Which still brings me to the following question....
There is clearly a lot of folks running series 4 PTO shafts on tractors putting out well in excess of the 35hp that these shafts are rated for- why are the shafts holding up? Is this disparity managed by torque limiters and slip clutches?
I've got a local dealer (Washington Tractor) checking with Bush Hog on whether a series 6 PTO shaft is OK to run a 286. These folks, as Rock knocker noted, carry/resell Bare Co. PTO stuff, and I like the looks of these offerings from Bare.