I’m looking for a 6 inch trenching bucket for our BH77 backhoe. Other than OEM Kubota, are there other options?
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Any pictures?Any half decent weld/fab shop can make one or a 'backyard bodger'. Only $50 in materials, plans off the net, took me a lazy day to make one.
I agree 100%. I have a 10" Kubota bucket and the soil needs to be very dry or you are in for a plugging hassel. I rarely use the bucket, an expensive anchor.6" bucket!!??
I sure hope you are digging in sand or VERY dry earth.
I have a 9" for my backhoe that I almost never use, since our clay sticks in it so bad, and I soon got VERY tired of wasting time and energy, getting off the tractor and cleaning it out with a digging bar.
Frankly, even the thought of a 6" bucket sends chills down my spine.
I agree 100%. I have a 10" Kubota bucket and the soil needs to be very dry or you are in for a plugging hassel. I rarely use the bucket, an expensive anchor.
A narrow bucket can be an issue.One of our guys asked for a 6" bucket for our Mini-X. When I tried to order one, the vendor said that the bucket would be narrower than where it attached to the boom. Never verified it for myself.
Keep your eye on Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist, and you will never know what will turn up within an hour's driving distance. I found an 8" trenching bucket last fall about an hour's drive from home. I really didn't need it but it was new and I figured that it was a good enough buy that if I didn't need it I could always get my money back and maybe even make a profit.A narrow bucket can be an issue.
I had been considering a 12" (narrow) bucket for my quick connect BT1100 hoe, with hyd. thumb.
I am not at my machine for the Winter, but realized that my thumb width must be 13" or more.
Thus the thumb would be scraping the sides of the hole with each bite.
Have decided that I must instead go with a 16" bucket, though I don't really want to..
A new 16" quick connect bucket is going to be expensive ($1,100+), and I don't think I can find a used one with cost effective shipping to zip 02651.
Another thing that might help is to cut a few holes (2" or so) in the back/bottom of the bucket to relieve the suction.I was just going to order the 6" bucket from BXpanded for my Kubota BT751 and saw this thread which now has me thinking twice about it. I'm just south of Charlotte and my soil is "pottery grade" clay. They say it "has cutaway sides to help with dumping excavated material". Has anyone here used that bucket in clay?
Has anyone tried a non-stick paint like they have for snowplow blades? I realize the paint will wear off but if it helps it might be worth painting it often.
Henro, would you consider selling your 10" bucket?
Your suggestion of watching Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist is great, but is just not workable in my situation.Keep your eye on Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist, and you will never know what will turn up within an hour's driving distance. I found an 8" trenching bucket last fall about an hour's drive from home. I really didn't need it but it was new and I figured that it was a good enough buy that if I didn't need it I could always get my money back and maybe even make a profit.
Thanks Boakley!I have a 6" bucket for my BH77 and it works great. (and a 16")
Technique plays a large roll in using smaller buckets and sticky soils
If you are a fan of dipper digging (jab, curl and stuff kind of operator) that likes to use short boom pulls / deep cuts per pass that packs the bucket you will have more more difficulty clearing the bucket versus an operator that favours boom use and shaves material into the bucket (longer pull with less aggressive cut)
In the Red River Valley we have lots of clay and even in wet areas a longer pull, less aggressive cut that shaves material into the bucket, and not wanting to pack bucket prior to dumping the pass makes a huge difference.
so much depends on matching the technique to your equipment and soil conditions.
- Jab and curl works well for sandy/dry soils/wide buckets,
- longer pulls, shaving material into the bucket works good in the stickier stuff and for narrow buckets.
practice makes perfect as my granddad used to say
for trenching for electrical or say 4" tile I do not find one bucket size works faster than another. The narrower bucket makes less of a mess if you are trying not to damage grass/trees etc... I also like the narrow bucket when digging large stumps as the narrow bucket breaks roots easier.