I just bought an L2501 Kubota and want to ad a Bush Hog. Which brand/model do you recommend? New? Used?
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I have an L3901 and it never even burps clearing woodlots with my ancient 5' Mohawk brush cutter. Thats 2' plus tall grasses, briars and bramble thickets, fallen limbs hiding in the leaves, and small saplings up to and beyond 2". I have no idea what it would do mowing a pasture of 3' grass but I would guess it would be pretty slow going.I just bought an L2501 Kubota and want to ad a Bush Hog. Which brand/model do you recommend? New? Used?
I saw an L2501 at a dealer lot the other day with a 5' cutter which was wider than the tires. The wheels were pulled in close and it may have had R1 tires.The general rule of thumb is 1 ft for 5 HP. However, my dealer suggested a 6 ft for my L2501.
His reasoning was you want the cutter to be wider than the tires. Practically speaking, that's a good idea. It may mean you have to go slower in really thick grass/brush. On the other hand, you clear 20% more on each pass. I don't have that much experience with a rotary cutter, and I live on sloped property. I'm probably never going to mow on M, so speed isn't really an issue for me.
Fwiw, mine has R4s with the OEM spacers. I can't say I've measured the width though.I saw an L2501 at a dealer lot the other day with a 5' cutter which was wider than the tires. The wheels were pulled in close and it may have had R1 tires.
I consider the above, excellent advice and it has been my experience as well.It really depends on what you plan to do with the rotary cutter. If your are simply mowing grass in a field fairly often (not waiting till it grows 3 feet tall and thick), you can probably run a 6 foot light duty cutter. If you are trying to reclaim a field or portions of fields, you will most likely need a 5 foot medium duty cutter, and the same is true for cutting new trails in overgrown areas.
I run a 5 foot medium duty cutter with a slip clutch PTO (highly recommend if you are taking back areas from briars, multiflora rose and etc. that are 5+ feet tall - you are going to occasionally hit things/ground out). I have my cutting height set to 5 inches, and I take it slow when reclaiming areas (frequently backing in and cutting down bigger than 1.5 inch bushes/trees with my chainsaw). Once a field is under control, I mow it with my finish mower (also set to 5 inches cut height).