The Tractor Thread

That looks like the one I have @Jake Smith. We used it to plant and harvest potatoes, and I removed the plow and used the structure to make a subsoiler to break up the clay layer I have under the topsoil. You probably won't need the subsoiler in Florida and using the middle buster on potatoes takes some practice.


That's "great", Don maybe I did good getting that one then. Do you have any more tips for me on using the middle buster, it may help me. You're right about not needing a subsoiler, "I think", with it being just sand here, it bust easier than clay and rock, like our daughter has in Atlanta, they try using a pick axe, and I don't have to tell you about what a "pick axe" does to you; I'm sure you know. What a "work out", that can be.
 
I think the different configurations of "driveways" (flat, crowned, wide, narrow) and the size of the gravel might drive the best tool for that job. The videos I've watched for box blades and rakes are always on large flat expanses, not graveled paths cut through the woods as ours is.

Ours is hilly and has a crown on it, and seems to get rutted real easily, so when the tires hit pits and rises, the attachment on the rear raises up and bottoms out. 7-8 years ago we paid to have it reworked. The guy used a skid loader and took it down to the bed, then laid down fresh gravel. It doesn't stay intact for long. Stuff washes away on the steep hills (it's a 75' drop from the top to the bottom.) There are places where the sides drop off so the gravel gets pushed away into the woods. Then others where it just gets pushed off into the grass.

Head of the driveway looking down:
ttyaVj0.jpeg


Half way down looking back up the last hill:
YkFQHAd.jpeg


The video for the rake I bought shows it pulling up large roots and dragging away sizeable logs. I paid for high quality. But I don't really have that need. It just doesn't seem to do that well on the gravel. My neighbor gets frustrated when he tells me to just back-drag the front end loader, because he's used a skid loader with treads and doesn't grasp how 4 wheels hitting rises and holes cause anything hanging off of the tractor to go up & down 12" at a pop. Maybe I need to reduce all the pressure on the 3 point hitch so the rake just drags on its own weight and does not follow the tractor's ups & downs. I hadn't thought of it before. But it still wouldn't work that well on the many places the road has a crown for the water to run off.
My driveway doesn't look much different from yours, but mine is only 600 feet long and yours looks much longer. It then connects to a dirt road, but I do almost nothing with that unless it becomes impassable. I can crown a bit with the rake, and I have been toying with the idea of putting a sandbag over the rake to keep it down. The length of the top link may matter as well. If I shorten my top link, the rake digs in more, but if I lengthen it it floats over the surface and only picks up big stuff on the surface. I don't usually crown with the rake; I use the box blade for that, but I find it easier to "sweep" the large rocks off the drive with the rake.
 
I think the different configurations of "driveways" (flat, crowned, wide, narrow) and the size of the gravel might drive the best tool for that job. The videos I've watched for box blades and rakes are always on large flat expanses, not graveled paths cut through the woods as ours is.

Ours is hilly and has a crown on it, and seems to get rutted real easily, so when the tires hit pits and rises, the attachment on the rear raises up and bottoms out. 7-8 years ago we paid to have it reworked. The guy used a skid loader and took it down to the bed, then laid down fresh gravel. It doesn't stay intact for long. Stuff washes away on the steep hills (it's a 75' drop from the top to the bottom.) There are places where the sides drop off so the gravel gets pushed away into the woods. Then others where it just gets pushed off into the grass.

Head of the driveway looking down:
ttyaVj0.jpeg


Half way down looking back up the last hill:
YkFQHAd.jpeg


The video for the rake I bought shows it pulling up large roots and dragging away sizeable logs. I paid for high quality. But I don't really have that need. It just doesn't seem to do that well on the gravel. My neighbor gets frustrated when he tells me to just back-drag the front end loader, because he's used a skid loader with treads and doesn't grasp how 4 wheels hitting rises and holes cause anything hanging off of the tractor to go up & down 12" at a pop. Maybe I need to reduce all the pressure on the 3 point hitch so the rake just drags on its own weight and does not follow the tractor's ups & downs. I hadn't thought of it before. But it still wouldn't work that well on the many places the road has a crown for the water to run off.


That second photo looks smooth and neat to me, but understand about not holding up too, after rains hit it changes quick, and needs more repairs, like our roads here do. I'm counting the days, awaiting my "plow".
 
My daughter even went to one of our technical schools to learn welding but she did not want to invest in the equipment.


All the new "technology", now welding equipment is getting "cheaper", now. Some of it isn't as good as the old equipment, but does work and more "affordable".

Like this one, it's only $69.99 on Amazon. They work just a little difficult to strike.

1769184143262.png


And the mig welders have a great price, but they work. $79.99 Amazon.

1769184296140.png
 
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My driveway doesn't look much different from yours, but mine is only 600 feet long and yours looks much longer. It then connects to a dirt road, but I do almost nothing with that unless it becomes impassable. I can crown a bit with the rake, and I have been toying with the idea of putting a sandbag over the rake to keep it down. The length of the top link may matter as well. If I shorten my top link, the rake digs in more, but if I lengthen it it floats over the surface and only picks up big stuff on the surface. I don't usually crown with the rake; I use the box blade for that, but I find it easier to "sweep" the large rocks off the drive with the rake.

Rocks, something I haven't seen in decades. When we first moved here with our dogs,cats and equine I was looking for a rock to throw at the dogs and there was none to be had.
Being a country girl skimming rocks across the lake, then ball player for most of adult life I could hit them where it was safe when they were acting up.
 
Got my "plow" today, so I put it together, then put it on the tractor. Took off; and "finally" got to cut a straight trench in the front, this will to stop neighbors from killing all the grass out front, when there's a bump on the road. A couple of our neighbors a few years ago, took their plow, and cut a trench coming straight in toward our fence, a big curve instead of keeping it straight. One who has passed now; I asked him why, go in toward the fence, instead of cutting a straight line. He said that is straight. What a, "liar", wish he would have got to see it now; nice and "straight".

Anyway, after the trench I switched to the box blade, and smoothed the road, and lots of neighbors came by while I was doing it, all waved and smiled. The "plow" works really well. I'm happy to have that done.
 
Got my "plow" today, so I put it together, then put it on the tractor. Took off; and "finally" got to cut a straight trench in the front, this will to stop neighbors from killing all the grass out front, when there's a bump on the road. A couple of our neighbors a few years ago, took their plow, and cut a trench coming straight in toward our fence, a big curve instead of keeping it straight. One who has passed now; I asked him why, go in toward the fence, instead of cutting a straight line. He said that is straight. What a, "liar", wish he would have got to see it now; nice and "straight".

Anyway, after the trench I switched to the box blade, and smoothed the road, and lots of neighbors came by while I was doing it, all waved and smiled. The "plow" works really well. I'm happy to have that done.

Glad you're enjoying the new plow, Jake. I hope that works to keep jackasses from driving on your lawn.
 
Now that I have the "plow"; I'm fixing to cut out a small "garden", for spring planting, and after it grows some vegetables, and producing well; I can put up some photos of how beneficial this "tractor" and "plow" are , then Marie will see how valuable they really are, and there will be no reason for her to be "saying", things like we can sell your tractor, or I'm gonna key that tractor if you turn one more light or fan off.

1769785796475.png
 
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Now that I have the "plow"; I'm fixing to cut out a small "garden", for spring planting, and after it grows some vegetables, and producing well; I can put up some photos of how beneficial this "tractor" and "plow" are , then Marie will see how valuable they really are, and there will be no reason for her to be "saying", things like we can sell your tractor, or I'm gonna key that tractor if you turn one more light or fan off.

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Now you need a tiller, @Jake Smith. That would be considerably more expensive than the plow.
 
Now you need a tiller, @Jake Smith. That would be considerably more expensive than the plow.
Unless they are having a really large garden, a small tiller might work. I used to have a nice little Gilson yard tractor that had the rototiller on it, and I just loved that little tiller. It was one that could be a lawn mower, but I didn’t use it for that, I just used the tiller for my garden.
It went with me when I moved from western Washington to Missouri, and then back home to north Idaho. I had to sell it when we moved from there, but it still worked fine when i sold it.
I got it used (and already old) from a place in Washington that sold used garden equipment.

IMG_1261.jpeg
 
Unless they are having a really large garden, a small tiller might work. I used to have a nice little Gilson yard tractor that had the rototiller on it, and I just loved that little tiller. It was one that could be a lawn mower, but I didn’t use it for that, I just used the tiller for my garden.
It went with me when I moved from western Washington to Missouri, and then back home to north Idaho. I had to sell it when we moved from there, but it still worked fine when i sold it.
I got it used (and already old) from a place in Washington that sold used garden equipment.

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I still have a tow-behind tiller @Yvonne Smith. It got torn up by the rocky soil here. My PTO-driven tiller is tougher. I hope it lasts.
 
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