milkman636
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,482
- Location
- Palm of the Right Hand
- Tractor
- Bobcat CT335 + John Deere 1023e (former owner of Kubota BX2370-1, John Deere 5210, and Ford 2000)
Something happpened yesterday that I don't remember reading about on here.
While tilling an area to plant some sweet corn I found a big rock about 5-6" down. It is an area that had broccoli planted last year, so it should have been easy tilling. On the second to last pass the tiller started bouncing and left about a funny looking spot in the finished till. When I got to the end of the row I stopped and checked everything out.
Looking under the tiller I saw that tines on two adjacent flanges in the middle were kicked backwards out of alingment and missing the leading bolt on the flange. Luckily the other bolt held on each one. So I went back to the funny looking spot and started diggin down by hand. When I had a big enough rock top exposed to stand on it with both feet, and also found one of my broken off bolt halves with the nut still on it, I stopped digging.
After reading about how these tillers just "walk up over rocks" I was suprised at having any damage. Two of my tine bolt sheared and I also found a raised dent in the top of the tiller where a rock hit on its way up out of the ground. The tines look like they survived fine, but I still was expecting any repairs in my first year of tiller ownership.
So is a tine bolt shearing just a normal experience for any of you that have some rocky remnants in your ground?
While tilling an area to plant some sweet corn I found a big rock about 5-6" down. It is an area that had broccoli planted last year, so it should have been easy tilling. On the second to last pass the tiller started bouncing and left about a funny looking spot in the finished till. When I got to the end of the row I stopped and checked everything out.
Looking under the tiller I saw that tines on two adjacent flanges in the middle were kicked backwards out of alingment and missing the leading bolt on the flange. Luckily the other bolt held on each one. So I went back to the funny looking spot and started diggin down by hand. When I had a big enough rock top exposed to stand on it with both feet, and also found one of my broken off bolt halves with the nut still on it, I stopped digging.
After reading about how these tillers just "walk up over rocks" I was suprised at having any damage. Two of my tine bolt sheared and I also found a raised dent in the top of the tiller where a rock hit on its way up out of the ground. The tines look like they survived fine, but I still was expecting any repairs in my first year of tiller ownership.
So is a tine bolt shearing just a normal experience for any of you that have some rocky remnants in your ground?