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Tractors, Mowers, Chippers, Trailers, Chainsaws, Generators, Driveway Erosion Control, ETC.

Discussion in 'Off-Topic Discussion' started by six5crèéd, Jan 27, 2020.

?

Do you mow in shorts?

  1. Mow, yes, weedeat, no

    42.1%
  2. Mow and weedeat, yes

    31.6%
  3. Pants all the way for me

    26.3%
  1. Mar 30, 2020 at 3:02 PM
    #401
    ralfnjan

    ralfnjan Well-Known Member

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    Been there a while?
     
    Tractorman, G.T. and six5crèéd[OP] like this.
  2. Mar 30, 2020 at 3:07 PM
    #402
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    I’d love to find one of them. I want to take our sons old cub cadet and put tracks on it and make him a small dozer.
     
    Tractorman likes this.
  3. Mar 30, 2020 at 3:34 PM
    #403
    G.T.

    G.T. Official TW Burrito Inspector

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    CONUS
    Vehicle:
    2011 Pyrite Mica 4WD DCLB TRDSport w/ FlipPac
    Some stick on chrome from pep boys
    Yeah, not pictured is the trailer for it. Both have junk trees growing through them. Used to make great side money with the trencher.

    Im on the fence about keeping this one. I’ll include the boy in the restore and if he shows enough interest then it’ll end up being his. I’ve used it to pull junk wood stumps and drag a firewood cart with it when just fooling around.
     
  4. Mar 30, 2020 at 4:50 PM
    #404
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    Road to nowhere....

    28BDD12D-44BC-4C14-B367-3F7A0ED0B80B.jpg

    C0BA4773-6159-41C2-A192-CB7AC6F32C4D.jpg

    42075A9D-D0A0-4905-AEEC-6D4FB10DF229.jpg

    We need a road to the back. Driving off the old slope with 8-14k lbs is just nuts, and impossible with snow. My wife’s dumbass husband has almost slide into the fence a couple times in mud. So this is my fix.

    Next will be a retaining wall. What do you all think? Boulder rock wall or brick retaining wall (the good stuff, not from HD)?
     
  5. Mar 31, 2020 at 4:16 AM
    #405
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    Which one would be less work? Which one is cheaper? That's how I look at things, lol.

    If you go boulder rock, how hard will it be to maintain it to keep the grass down, etc?
     
    ColoradoTJ[QUOTED] likes this.
  6. Mar 31, 2020 at 5:53 AM
    #406
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    Large boulder retaining wall is by far cheaper in comparison.

    If we can get something to grow, adding cover plants would be our goal. The weather here pretty much prevents grasses growing on hills due to high winds and accompanied rain/snow.

    Not to this extreme, but maybe an idea of what could be done.
    313627E5-3C00-409F-B3CF-67664544B272.jpg
     
  7. Mar 31, 2020 at 7:19 AM
    #407
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    I just found this, great idea for those without a loader!

    [​IMG]
     
    Tractorman and ColoradoTJ like this.
  8. Mar 31, 2020 at 7:35 AM
    #408
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    Question from the newb...be kind.

    What size tire can I run with no lift?

    :rofl:

    Ok. That was bad. But on a serious note, tire pressures is the topic. My fronts I keep at maximum rated pressure due to the loader. How about the rear? My specific rear tires are rated for max at 30 psi. When running at max, obviously the tractor rides like a lumber wagon. Yesterday I dropped to 24 psi and tried not losing any more rim guard than needed. What a difference.

    What do you guys run for tire pressures?
     
    Tractorman and six5crèéd[OP] like this.
  9. Mar 31, 2020 at 7:36 AM
    #409
    Noelie84

    Noelie84 What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

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    8.5 Fisher XV2, some switches, some lights.
    Or, depending on the build quality, if you need to lift something heavier than what your loader can handle. Those are handy if you've got a smaller tractor like I do, since my loader cap is only like 6-700lbs but my 3pt is rated for 1200-ish.


    Similar strategy. The fronts I keep maxed, the rears I run about 30% below max. If I were using a bottom plow or something of that nature, or carrying a lot of weight on the 3pt I'd bump it up
     
    Last edited: Mar 31, 2020
  10. Mar 31, 2020 at 7:49 AM
    #410
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    I run mine around 15-20 PSI with fluid in them (16.9-30's), here's a neat calculator for tires.

    https://commercial.firestone.com/en-us/agriculture/resources/tire-pressure-inflation-calculator
     
  11. Mar 31, 2020 at 8:33 AM
    #411
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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  12. Mar 31, 2020 at 8:35 AM
    #412
    Noelie84

    Noelie84 What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

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    8.5 Fisher XV2, some switches, some lights.
    If you're loaded, though, it'll help for stability.
     
  13. Mar 31, 2020 at 8:42 AM
    #413
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    I agree. I’m at 24 lbs on the rear now and that seems pretty good. Fronts are at max.
     
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  14. Mar 31, 2020 at 8:55 AM
    #414
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    What I have also noticed, is I may need a little wider stance on the rear. I get into some really off camber situation on our property due to terrain, and when the rear tires come up, that makes me suck seat foam. Really not wanting to test out my seatbelt and ROPS.

    Anyone run 1.5-2” wheel spacers?
     
    Tractorman and six5crèéd[OP] like this.
  15. Mar 31, 2020 at 8:58 AM
    #415
    Noelie84

    Noelie84 What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

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    8.5 Fisher XV2, some switches, some lights.
    You may have reversible wheels; I know that mine are. That would get you some extra room.

    Edit- I just went back and checked your photos; looks like yours are already set for max offset.
     
  16. Mar 31, 2020 at 9:03 AM
    #416
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    Mine are too, you may be able to flip the dish if you have one in the center.
     
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  17. Mar 31, 2020 at 9:11 AM
    #417
    ColoradoTJ

    ColoradoTJ Retired cat herder Moderator

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    I have R4 tires/wheels. Spacers are the only way to get the wider stance.

    I’ve heard mixed reviews on leaks, bearing issues, and some have used them for decades without any issues.
     
    Tractorman and six5crèéd[OP] like this.
  18. Mar 31, 2020 at 9:39 AM
    #418
    Noelie84

    Noelie84 What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

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    8.5 Fisher XV2, some switches, some lights.
    Same as on a Toyota, then :laugh:

    I've never cared for spacers personally, for the reasons you mentioned above. But if you're not loading the rear of the tractor heavily with implements then I wouldn't expect you to have any trouble; running a spacer with minimal load is probably easier on the rear bearings than no spacer with a max'd out 3 point hitch would be. :notsure:

    Edit-
    Sounds like you need to go 'vintage' and get yourself something with a set of power shift wheels :thumbsup:
    6:15

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYH3q9nJ-fc
     
    Last edited: Mar 31, 2020
  19. Apr 1, 2020 at 6:41 AM
    #419
    Muldoon

    Muldoon Well-Known Member

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    5100s, Wheelers AAL, Leer 100R
    Ok who knows old diesels? My 1960 Massey 35 with the Perkins diesel I mentioned earlier in the thread might need some love. Was running hay back to the cows yesterday and didn’t realize the radiator sprung a decent leak til I was back on the driveway and saw the antifreeze coming out. Shut the tractor off and grabbed a bucket to catch what came out. Opened the drain cock to completely drain it. Checked the temp gauge and it was reading on the high side of the green part, so hotter than normal for sure but not into the red. But I didn’t look at it til maybe 3 min after the tractor was shut off and fluid was draining so not sure how hot it actually got. It was never steaming though.

    anyways, pulled the radiator, cleaned it, soldered the hole, tested for further leaks, all good, reinstalled, refilled with antifreeze. took about a gallon of mix, the whole system holds about 2.5 gallons supposedly, so it was holding half its capacity in the block still when I parked it. Started the tractor and immediately hear an unusual quick click but it starts like normal. This tractor has always smoked on startup, especially cold, but after it warms up the smoke goes away. Well I let it sit and idle a while to check for radiator leaks, and while it was holding strong, the temp gauge never moved to indicate water temp, and the tractor kept smoking instead of clearing up after a while.

    My thought is that maybe the click I heard on startup was my temp gauge failing? I’m hoping the smoke not going away isn’t an indicator of engine damage due to running low on coolant. Just hard to know since this is all happening at the same time, what the real issue is. Kind of disinclined to keep running it to test it if engine damage is the issue. I do need the tractor though. Maybe a rebuild is in order. That would be quite an undertaking for me but I’d like to think I’d be capable of it. Sorry for the long post.
     
  20. Apr 1, 2020 at 6:48 AM
    #420
    six5crèéd

    six5crèéd [OP] Be the light

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    Is it white smoke or black smoke?
     

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