Yeah I'm sold. Looking for something that can double as a regular brush hog for mowing and a tree eater for my 11 acres of forest. This seems to do the job of both in one implement.
Just found your channel, for a bushhog iam very impressed, you won't do that with a cheap bush hog🤪, that thing does a great job keep up the good work 😇
How close to the ground does it cut. Wondering about the small stubs everywhere. Very impressive for the overall cost compared to 100k plus skid steer.
It will cut at about 2” if you set the skids right on the ground. The small stumps and everything I removed with a grapple, disk set, and cultivator a color months after this and they cleaned Up pretty easily. Surprisingly, my tires still look great with zero cuts/flats and very few chips after 250 hrs. Some of that I contribute to our soft clay soil though and the fact that the stumps have a lot of give.
I’m assuming you mean driving the tractor forward and running over stuff? The cutter does just fine but it’s something I try to avoid just because of the way the hydraulic lines, electrical lines and linkages are run on the tractor. The front of the cutter is open though with chain guards so material can get underneath just fine.
@@blackstonefarmsouth596 Well, it would help with your frustrations with the vines. Running forward with the bucket low will also help find stumps, concrete, and junk before your cutter does. Thanks for the videos. I've been looking at heavy duty cutters. My front runners were the Rhino TW35 and the Woods BrushBull. You might have just saved me $2k and a better-for-me product.
I disagree, there are certainly better, more effective tools/machinery that would do the job faster and more efficiently. However, this is what I can afford it has done the job without so much as a hiccup. For me it’s been exactly the tool I needed.
Yeah I'm sold. Looking for something that can double as a regular brush hog for mowing and a tree eater for my 11 acres of forest. This seems to do the job of both in one implement.
Just found your channel, for a bushhog iam very impressed, you won't do that with a cheap bush hog🤪, that thing does a great job keep up the good work 😇
Wow! Just beating the ever living piss out of that thing and it keeps on truckin!
How close to the ground does it cut. Wondering about the small stubs everywhere. Very impressive for the overall cost compared to 100k plus skid steer.
It will cut at about 2” if you set the skids right on the ground. The small stumps and everything I removed with a grapple, disk set, and cultivator a color months after this and they cleaned Up pretty easily. Surprisingly, my tires still look great with zero cuts/flats and very few chips after 250 hrs. Some of that I contribute to our soft clay soil though and the fact that the stumps have a lot of give.
@@blackstonefarmsouth596 thank you for replying so quickly.
Has the debris torn up the tractor tires much?
How does it cut going forward and pushing stuff over?
I’m assuming you mean driving the tractor forward and running over stuff? The cutter does just fine but it’s something I try to avoid just because of the way the hydraulic lines, electrical lines and linkages are run on the tractor. The front of the cutter is open though with chain guards so material can get underneath just fine.
@@blackstonefarmsouth596 Well, it would help with your frustrations with the vines. Running forward with the bucket low will also help find stumps, concrete, and junk before your cutter does.
Thanks for the videos. I've been looking at heavy duty cutters. My front runners were the Rhino TW35 and the Woods BrushBull. You might have just saved me $2k and a better-for-me product.
Now, I’m Wishing I had bought a Brush Cutter, instead of a regular mower…,
Wrong tool for the job.
I disagree, there are certainly better, more effective tools/machinery that would do the job faster and more efficiently. However, this is what I can afford it has done the job without so much as a hiccup. For me it’s been exactly the tool I needed.