is a 6 foot box blade too big for my B7800 rarely use the scarifiers because the clay and dry so calif. weather. New to me tractor and plan on ballasting the rear tires.
I don’t know the precise makeup of the clay you have so take this with a grain of salt, but if you try boxblading wet clay and find it to be difficult and unproductive, don’t be surprised and try it again with rippers when dry.My mistake, I thought you were selling it sorry. Yes, clay needs to be wet/soaked or break it up with the teeth.
This small tractor is new to me just sold my old Ford 3500 and it would pull a 6 foot box full unless it was up a grade(which our property is) then the wheels would just spin. You kinda answered my question they have the power not the heft to do the bigger job. thanksNot sure what you plan on doing with it. . . without scarifiers it's just going to ride on top of your dry clay. If that box fills I don't think you will have enough grunt to pull it.
I have a 6' box blade on my L3800 and when its full its a real load.
I think it all depends on what you are doing.is a 6 foot box blade too big for my B7800 rarely use the scarifiers because the clay and dry so calif. weather. New to me tractor and plan on ballasting the rear tires.
PM me I can not find your listing.I have a 6’ Land Pride BB for sale…I used it once…here in CA if interested OP. The listing and pics are in the for sale forum. View attachment 78248