Removing brush hog blades

   / Removing brush hog blades #1  

ericm979

Super Member
Joined
Nov 25, 2016
Messages
5,753
Location
Santa Cruz Mountains CA, Southern OR
Tractor
Branson 3725H Deere 5105
The used brush hog I acquired last year has badly worn blades. I was able to remove the 600 ft-lb blade nuts but I could not get the bolts out of the carrier.
Screenshot_2025-05-05_10-50-43.png


Bolt #33 is stuck in part #30. It's a shouldered bolt with a 1 1/8 threaded portion and about 1 3/8 shoulder that fits in the carrier and holds the blade. I doused it in penetrating fluid and beat on it with a pipe and an engineers hammer and an air hammer but it did not budge. Any ideas how to get it loose? If I do hit it with something heavier I will support part #30 from below so the bearings are not taking the force. I can get at it from below, or from above through about a 3"hole in the deck.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #2  
You could try heating it with a torch to break the rust bond... beyond that daily application of a rust buster solvent for a week or so may do the trick.
A second thought is a airchisle driven in between the blade and the center piece to add separation pressure then try the hammer once it is preloaded.
It may take a combination of all of the above. GL
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #3  
Any way you can get a ball joint press in there, if not as scootr said, heat is gonna be your best bet.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades
  • Thread Starter
#4  
I was thinking heat. Would a decent hand held propane torch do or do I need Oxy-Acetylene? I've used propane torches on stuck fasteners with success before but the fasteners were a lot smaller.

There's no room for a normal gear puller unless I remove the blade carrier entirely. Then I could get at it from above without going through the 3" hole in the deck.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #5  
I've use handheld MAP gas for all sorts of heating projects, big pieces just take longer.
A bearing puller may help. I 've been know to get these as tight as I dare and whack em with a hammer.
 

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   / Removing brush hog blades #6  
Use two Burnze-o-matic hand torches.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #7  
That’s weird cause mine usually just fall out.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #8  
I was thinking heat. Would a decent hand held propane torch do or do I need Oxy-Acetylene? I've used propane torches on stuck fasteners with success before but the fasteners were a lot smaller.

There's no room for a normal gear puller unless I remove the blade carrier entirely. Then I could get at it from above without going through the 3" hole in the deck.
If you have removed item 34 and 35, I would drive a wedge/chisel/air hammer in between the blade and carrier.
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #9  
Worst is being 20M from shop and bending a blade.
My bolts usually just fall out though.
My DeWalt impact has just enough azz to get them out of my CX-15
 
   / Removing brush hog blades #10  
On my very old Howse 6', the bolts also have a "pinched-up" key made into the tapered shoulder of the bolt to keep the bolt from turning which could be adding difficulty removing them. It's possible the bolt was/has spun and that key is wedging the bolt in even tighter. My personal opinion is a propane torch will be useless, need something much hotter to heat that much metal and a BIG hammer. You should always replace the bolts when replacing blades - they are a wear item too.
 

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