I have a new L3560HST with a 6 foot bucket and a back blade ordered. I've only ever used a Farmall cub with a small front blade and a Ford 8n with a manure bucket, and so have no experience with these attachments. I'd like to be able to scrape snow away from gates and keep some pathways between barns and the back pasture open. Some are across my lawn. I've already discovered I can do some serious damage with my bucket to the ground and have been practicing back blading in "float" out back where it wouldn't matter. I get into the most trouble where one or the other of the wheels goes over a bump or into a hole and tilts the bucket in some way I hadn't planned. I'd rather not learn everything the hard way, so I would sure appreciate any hints you'all would like to share about this. Thanks!
sheepfarmer,
Good day sir!
Now, I will likely have another opinion from those expressed already but here it goes.
You have a great tractor there and an experience similar to ours. We had a Ford 2N and a back blade. No loader. To plow, the 6 foot back blade was used pulling mostly. However, the old Ford hydraulics would not stay in place, so the blade slowly lowered from an internal leak somewhere. I often backed up with that tractor to clear snow. Either way, I dug up gravel at times.
However, the snow did get plowed backwards or forward at times using the 2N.
Then came our Kubota L3700SU (read L3800). Now the 6 foot blade stays where I put it. I put it just an inch or so above the rear tires on flat ground to start plowing. I will then set the 3PT set screw for that level to stop at that height. The hydraulics keep the blade there and we clear our 300 foot driveway with the blade tilted at 45 degrees in two nice, slow passes. I only pull with our tractor for snow. With the ability to set the level and keep it there with the stop screw, you can lift your blade at the end of a pass, FEL the snow in the way and put the blade back down not being concerned about gravel disturbance.
We also have a box blade and by way of explaining, it keeps our driveway level when I can use it in the good weather. Thus, our snow blade is not running into uneven ground when plowing snow.
Many of the posts here find disappointment trying to use a tractor as a bulldozer and what I know now is that bulldozers are meant to push, tractors are built to pull. I have yet to see a bulldozer with a blade on the back although it may work great.
We use our FEL in the snow to remove or tidy up any slop form the pulls. To clear out in front of a driveway apron to a garage, I pull with the blade straight...parallel with the building to pull the snow off the apron. Then, I will scoop it up and dump the snow out of the paths.
Everyone has their techniques and for us, this one is most useful, quickest and safer than the old 2N by a long shot. As long as your 3pt hydraulics are stable, this technique works great. The visibility going forward and ability to see the edges using your tractor as a guide makes for quick work.
If the snow pushers disagree, that's all and good and accepted. This is just some Orange peel coming into the OTT information exchange.
Happy plowing, pulling and OTT'ing,
Burt