With locations in Plainfield New Hampshire, Pittsford Vermont, Troy New York, Sharon Springs New York, Greenville New York and Oneonta New York, Townline Equipment is a full equipment, service and parts dealer of new and used tractors and construction equipment serving New Hampshire, Vermont, New York and New England. As a family-owned business since 1971, we offer high quality construction, farming, compact tractor, utility tractor and implement products for construction applications, agricultural operations, personal property management, landscaping, municipalities, snow removal and forestry work. Our quality products partnered with our outstanding service support provides our customers with the best value for their dollar. To learn more about the products we sell and the services we provide, please visit our website at www.TownlineEquipment.com
I run a Kubota zero turn for a few years cutting grass on a college campus, and they are great mowers. As a homeowner they are way above my budget. Even used one's as high.
Good video. I own a vegetation management company. I was wondering how fast these type of Mulcher are compared to the full size skid steer Mulcher. The skidsteer is much faster, although a skidsteer can’t mulch pond edges or steep hill sides.
Ok this video gave me the hookup information I needed. I have the exact same Kubota and rototiller but no papers with the rototiller. So I'm kinda reliant on RU-vid on how to do the hook-ups. Thanks for your time to make this video. It's very much appreciated.❤❤
Too bad it has no engine. My Gravely zero turn has 23 Hp. We need faster turning tillers. We need tillers to run like a Mantis tiller and make the soil like powder.
Why does operator back so far up from the windrow to eject the bale. He ejected one on a down hill so it rolled. Noticed the baler does a bad job wrapping the ends of the bales
Run lower RPM on the PTO, go slower speed with tractor, make TWO light passes, you'll get better results. About 10 feet before end of the row start slowly lifting the implement up off the ground (very slowly) and you'll drop the dirt and carry only the trash to the end. Pre-plan where you're going to rake your trash to and end up with 1 or 2 piles instead of 20 and you'll save time. Make sure the tires to the 3-point hitch is the 2 spots taking all the weight, while keeping the drum suspended off the ground, or you will end up digging too deep and creating bumps. It took me years to finesse a power rake. Most videos on RU-vid show people burying the drum and everything (dirt and rocks and sticks) is flying and going over the drum leaving a mess. If you lightly rake as I mentioned above, you'll carry only the trash. Go slow, less PTO RPM, and make two light passes and you'll be amazed.
These sub frame mounted plows are operated off oof the tractors loader valve so you are able to apply down pressure like a loader would. You have better visibility since there are not loader arms in front of you. Another added benefit is the subframe, this allows you to run a wider plow with out the risk of bending your loader.
The Kubota U55-4 and the 057, bith 5t excavators have the worst oil flow and pressures of any 5t excavator. Running any forestry head on the machines is a disaster. The oil flow you need to be talking about is at max presuure, or what the mulcher need to spin, not the oil flow at 0 pressure. The 5t kubota relief at the couplers is set to 170bar or 2500psi. These mulchers require at least 220bar or 3200 psi in order to spin the heavy rotor. Pressure V oil flow is what it's about. Compare the likes of Bobcat, Yanmar, Hitachi, CAT, Komatsu, and Takeuchi, and you'll see how pathetic Kubota's hydraulics are. My company has documented info on flow tests of dozens of excavators. You do, however, make sense talking about one-way circuits. Sorry to rain on your parade, but you need to speak to Kubota hydraulic dept and ask them why flows are lower at the coupllers than other brands. They'll tell that Kubota does have good flows and pressures, but they focus this strength on their breakout force, for digging, the expense of hydraulic attachments.
@@victorwathavu I don’t, I have a track loader atm but I was considering a 5T excavation for mulching and digging. I’ve been put off based on poor hydraulic flow but it you know of any that work well I’m all ears. I hear that case have some pretty good flow rates but their website doesn’t mention the actual rates in their specification downloads. Plus I hear some excavations have seperate pumps etc which a.lows the high flow auxiliary to operate consistently. But I’m not at all that knowledgeable on this topic.
My 2022 sidekick is junk. Bad Gas and water contamination of the crankcase oil. Been in the shop a month now with a warranty claim and dealer can not get help from the kubota rep to find the problem and a solution. Seems the 850 engines have a problem that can only be solved by throwing parts at them and Kubota is ignoring that. Don't waste your money on the sidekick look for a side by side from a reputable company that specializes in them. My buddybought a Ranger when I bought the sidekick and he has had zero problems and at 25 hours mine has been ib the shop a month with Kubota not caring..
I want two attachments for my 3 year old BX 1880 and the first is a good usable set of Quick attach forks and the second is of course a Roto Tiller. The tiller you are using would be perfect for my well established garden but would like to know if you had to cut the PTO shaft in order to hook it to your BX. Thanks.