Indian SummerNot so sure Dusty. . . since I serviced and put my blower on nothing but record setting high temps every day. . . should be 75 today - wtf?
Indian SummerNot so sure Dusty. . . since I serviced and put my blower on nothing but record setting high temps every day. . . should be 75 today - wtf?
Always hard to tell in a picture, but looks like you have a little bit of a grade…do you do anything for traction? Or you have enough weight that there no troubles? (How’s the MX with ice on your road/drive?)A beautiful, sunny but cold morning with a low of 16F at the house this morning, and it's going to get a lot colder this coming week. Not a lot of snow but enough to justify blowing and plowing about 400 yards of driveway. Seriously, virtually no HST whine in low range (maybe even none that I can hear) and the engine in this little beast just purrs. What a perfect tractor for this sort of work. Both the snow blade and snow blower are set up "perfectly" for my needs.
I want to run the M6060 this winter too rather than let it sit, and was thinking of running the snow blade on the M along with a Herd 750 seeder/gritter on the back, but the MX is just really good at this winter work, and running one tractor and one block heater might be the best solution. I don't know ... I'll see how it goes. One thing for sure though, I don't have a rear wiper on the M so running the snow blower on that tractor would be problematic unless I installed a rear wiper which I'll probably do next year.
Oh, I added another set of Outback hose markers to the snow blower chute rotation and deflection hoses to avoid the inevitable " eeny, meeny, miny, moe" routine ever year. I'm steadily getting all of the hydraulic hoses marked this way and I like it.
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That great post really deserves it's own thread so it can better help others in the future.Finished the install of the Summit 3FV
Never seen or heard of this product before. Thanks for the heads up... https://outbackwrap.com/collections/hydraulic-hose-markersA beautiful, sunny but cold morning with a low of 16F at the house this morning, and it's going to get a lot colder this coming week. Not a lot of snow but enough to justify blowing and plowing about 400 yards of driveway. Seriously, virtually no HST whine in low range (maybe even none that I can hear) and the engine in this little beast just purrs. What a perfect tractor for this sort of work. Both the snow blade and snow blower are set up "perfectly" for my needs.
I want to run the M6060 this winter too rather than let it sit, and was thinking of running the snow blade on the M along with a Herd 750 seeder/gritter on the back, but the MX is just really good at this winter work, and running one tractor and one block heater might be the best solution. I don't know ... I'll see how it goes. One thing for sure though, I don't have a rear wiper on the M so running the snow blower on that tractor would be problematic unless I installed a rear wiper which I'll probably do next year.
Oh, I added another set of Outback hose markers to the snow blower chute rotation and deflection hoses to avoid the inevitable " eeny, meeny, miny, moe" routine ever year. I'm steadily getting all of the hydraulic hoses marked this way and I like it.
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I have a lot of grade to deal with, particularly the lower gravel driveway. I ran chains on the BX25 the first year, then screw in spikes/studs for a couple of years until I had asphalt put down. I ran front chains on the MX6000 open station on gravel for the first winter, but don't run anything on the MX cabbed tractor or M.Always hard to tell in a picture, but looks like you have a little bit of a grade…do you do anything for traction? Or you have enough weight that there no troubles? (How’s the MX with ice on your road/drive?)
Keep that chit out up there and out of South Texas.
I have a CAI boom pole but didn't really think of using it to move implements to higher ground. The M6060 loader can go fairly high, but with the SSQA boom pole I'd have no problem raising implements 15' off the deck, maybe more! Perhaps I should put the rotary cutter on the bed of the LMTV for the winter. I could probably fit three or four implements on the bed which is 8ft wide and probably 12ft long.Looks like the same system that dumped on us View attachment 90232 View attachment 90233 s here in SE Idaho. It inspired me to get my blower and front blade out, and stash some other implements for the winter. I finally found a place for the post hole digger, up and outa the way. The mower goes on top of the rarely used trailer, that I custom built for my since sold U 25 mini excavator. Turns out it's perfect for the L3301 also, dumb luck!
Same with the tip height of my jib that inserts into the hitch receiver on the forks frame, suprisingly high, handy as heck at times.I have a CAI boom pole but didn't really think of using it to move implements to higher ground. The M6060 loader can go fairly high, but with the SSQA boom pole I'd have no problem raising implements 15' off the deck, maybe more! Perhaps I should put the rotary cutter on the bed of the LMTV for the winter. I could probably fit three or four implements on the bed which is 8ft wide and probably 12ft long.
My grapple is new, and was manufactured like that.Consider welding some plate on the back of that grapple to provide your tractor some more protection from wood stabs pushing through. The front pieces on the tractor are not cheap, lesson learned. And when I was using grapple on the CTL, the wood stabs felt like they were trying to pierce me in the cab.
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Here is mine now with welded plate.
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