9492 by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
We've had the 2011 BX 25 TLB since 2019, and have completed all the known backhoe jobs.
It was a purchase from family, with full maintenance history, at a great price.
The BX has had hundreds of hours of usage since purchase in 2019 both at the house, and the recreational property/cabin site.
IMG_20220529_191836805_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
The cabin site is around 30 minutes driving time away from the house, and I continue hauling the BX on a 7000 pound trailer equipped with four wheels of electric brakes with my Jeep.
We have added an electric brake controller to the Toyota Tacoma pickup, and use the Tacoma when we rarely trailer the Kubota any further away then just going to the recreational property/cabin.
IMG_20190711_200322180 by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
So a month or so ago, we picked up the BXpanded backhoe dolly and removed the BT 601 backhoe from the BX.
IMG_20230908_155019002_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
We finally got a 40' Hi-cube shipping container hauled/installed at our recreational property early this spring for implement storage. So now after four years, we brought the brand new/unused/four year old Mahindra rebranded Kodiak 4' brush cutter up from storage at the house. Now we can use the brush cutter for cleaning up several old fields and pastures and get into the deer hunting food plot silliness.
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cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
The Kodiak brush cutter worked great, and it was my first time using one.
I only broke one 540 PTO shear bolt, and the second shear bolt doesn't owe me a dime.
The weeds and goldenrod being cut/chopped have caused the underlying native grass to flourish.
This should attract the local deer to the area we bush hogged. It's too late in the season for planting now.
I did get the BX stuck while doing bush hog work and the neighbor pulled me out with his large farm tractor.
IMG_20230820_162942231_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
The Trail Camera photo is the same piece of ground as the photo with the Honda Pioneer, it's just two weeks later.
I finished all the bush hog work that I am going to do for this season, and parked the bush hog in the shipping container for the winter. That container being a Hi-cube is 9' 6" tall and I can back inside the container without lowering the extra tall BX TLB ROPS.
IMG_20230904_143839579_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
And no, the pictured Honda Pioneer side by side will not extract a stuck Kubota BX 25 with a bush hog on the back from a mud hole.
09150032 by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
After hauling the tractor back to the house, I figured I should do something for rear ballast on the little BX.
We use it for snow removal at the house. With the bar tires on the BX, and the backhoe attached, the BX will go anywhere in the snow and does a splendid job with snow removal. Now the backhoe is on the cart, so the rear weight/traction and front loader lift capacity are all seriously reduced.
I did look at inexpensive Amazon ballast boxes, and nice USA made ballast boxes are prohibitively expensive.
I ultimately decided to make my own from a 20 gallon steel solvent barrel and fill it with concrete.
My scrap steel pile in the barn had most of the material, and the drum. The concrete was free.
I did have to purchase a one inch diameter cold rolled steel bar four feet long.
Also several large diameter drill bits required purchasing.
All in for the job, $142
The Kubota orange paint (Rust-Oleum in a quart can) I already had and applied with a brush.
I debated with myself whether I should install PVC plastic pipe or pipes in the concrete for transporting
butch bars /tools with handles. I eventually decided that the weight was more important to me than the convenience of transporting handled tools. The primary usage for the ballast barrel is at the house doing snow removal and the tools with handles are readily available.
Kubota literature says the backhoe weighs 617 pounds, the concrete calculated weight and the actual weight of the barrel along with all of the steel is at 450 pounds. So overall, it's reasonably close.
After cutting all the steel pieces, and drilling numerous holes, I assembled the steel components with threaded rod and hardware. I had to turn down the ends on the 1" diameter purchased steel bar to 7/8" to fit the Class 1 three point hitch on the BX.
When assembled, I used a stick welder to weld the entire thing into a somewhat permanent position for transporting the ballast barrel on a trailer to the concrete pour location. Once the concrete was poured and cured, the concrete holds all the ballast barrel components in position.
I think it turned out nice for $142 and several afternoons of "free" labor out in my shop.
IMG_20230829_161059710_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
IMG_20230829_161042198_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
IMG_20230906_093225467_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
IMG_20230908_144139291 by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
IMG_20230920_164800040_HDR by
cee_Kamp 32ACP, on Flickr
You can see the chains I added so the ballast barrel is supported by mechanical means rather that the somewhat light duty three point hitch hydraulics.