Hi all,
I figured out how to use the video camera as a still camera and took some photos of the pond project. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif Work was kind enough to shut the plant down for the week of July 4th (without pay /w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif), and I took the opportunity to see how much work the Kubota could do in two days.
I found out that I could really move some major dirt by using a combination of the FEL and the box blade. You can't really see it, but the hill side has been reshaped and resloped to have a more gradual decent to the bottom of the pond on the one side. The spoils have been moved down hill to raise it so that water will be trapped and go back to the dug pond.
The tractor worked great on the project with only one "finding". The 3pt lever got hard to move when the tractor was hot. I guess hot is a relative term as the temp only went up to 3/8th on the guage. I found the jam nut to control the lever's tension and backed it off by 1/4 turn and that fixed it. Most of the work was done at PTO speed to get the power to move the dirt. Typically, the mid range was used but on occasion it needed to go into low range. I did learn alot about feathering the peddle to keep the rpms in the right range!
The tractor is also ALOT more thirsty when run for 8-9 hours in a row at pto speed. Glug glug glug. That's the sound of 8-9 gallons of fuel being used each day. Glug Glug Glug. There's still more to do, but progress is being made.
John Bud
I figured out how to use the video camera as a still camera and took some photos of the pond project. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif Work was kind enough to shut the plant down for the week of July 4th (without pay /w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif), and I took the opportunity to see how much work the Kubota could do in two days.
I found out that I could really move some major dirt by using a combination of the FEL and the box blade. You can't really see it, but the hill side has been reshaped and resloped to have a more gradual decent to the bottom of the pond on the one side. The spoils have been moved down hill to raise it so that water will be trapped and go back to the dug pond.
The tractor worked great on the project with only one "finding". The 3pt lever got hard to move when the tractor was hot. I guess hot is a relative term as the temp only went up to 3/8th on the guage. I found the jam nut to control the lever's tension and backed it off by 1/4 turn and that fixed it. Most of the work was done at PTO speed to get the power to move the dirt. Typically, the mid range was used but on occasion it needed to go into low range. I did learn alot about feathering the peddle to keep the rpms in the right range!
The tractor is also ALOT more thirsty when run for 8-9 hours in a row at pto speed. Glug glug glug. That's the sound of 8-9 gallons of fuel being used each day. Glug Glug Glug. There's still more to do, but progress is being made.
John Bud

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