I also lubed everything b4 1st use.
Considering I got grease all over me while I was trimming the shaft, I didn't see much point in adding more that was just gonna sling off. I figured out real quick that it's pretty darn easy to trim that shaft without removing the plastic guards. I marked what I needed to remove (with a little fudge factor on the supplied formula). Cut the plastic sleeve first, and then cut the shaft on each piece the same amount I cut off the sleeve. I just touched up the edges with a half-round file, because I wasn't real aggressive with my grinder. Took my time and made a clean cut.
Got up the next morning, went to TSC in Montevallo and got a 5 gallon bucket of AW46 hydraulic oil, and bingo, ready to go. Chewed up everything I had laying on the ground from my stump/tree pulling episode from a couple weeks ago. Only stalled the tractor once. I stood there like an idiot knowing I should push the infeed bar to stop it, and didn't do it. Barely any effect on the tractor when I turn on the PTO at about 1250 RPM. Found out two things will cancel the PTO seat bypass function. I kicked the brake to release the parking brake, and that turned the bypass off, but since I was sitting in the seat, didn't matter, PTO kept running, engine kept running. When I stalled the engine the one time, that also turned off the bypass.
I've found that the infeed drum isn't nearly as bitey as I would like it to be, especially on stuff with stringy bark and wood fiber like elm. One tooth of the drum will catch, but before gets high enough to walk over the end, it slips off and bangs down on the stop bolts. I'm sure there's an adjustment for that be sides the spring tension. Quite frustrating when ya know the tractor will handle the load, and you can't feed the load because the infeed wheel won't bite on it. Maybe sharper edges on the drum teeth? Notches to give it some serious bite? I'll see what I can find about adjustments, but elm has a very corky outer bark, very stringy stuff inside, and the sap is slicker than greased monkey snot. Hard to get any elm larger than 3" started. Otherwise, it'll slice off 1/4" thick cross sections without even straining on some pretty big stuff.
Still learning how to use the stump bucket, but dug up about a half dozen with it. Might go back to just pulling out the ones under 6 inches OD, and dig only when I have to.