Firstgear
Active member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L3560LE, Grapple, bucket, snow plow, forks, stump bucket
I have rented that style in the past and found them to be a real workout. If I was 30 years younger maybe.I don't have a 3point or attachable grinder, but I do have a stand alone one I have been really happy with. https://www.amazon.com/Powered-Certified-Commercial-Multi-Position-Adjustable/dp/B07Q4D9RBV
I don't remove a lot of stumps, but have 20-30 of various sizes around a few properties that I have/had to take care of. It has worked well, even if it is a lot more manual process than anything tractor attached.
For this reason I preferred the turnbuckle style that the B7200 had.The oval shaped holes on that tractor are the only ones that line up with the 3 point centered. We had to offset it a little to get two round holes lined up to reduce side to side movement.
I have backup cameras on my tractors and was able to tilt the camera on the JD so it focused right on the cutting head and stump. SIL ignored it and still ran it looking back. Looking back on this tractor is even more of a challenge because I mounted a captains chair out of a van in place of the stock seat.I too have a Woodland Mill Stump Grinder. Have ground about 75 stumps, most over 10" dia. I use it on my Kubota MX5100. Works very well. I purchased extra cutters but have not even had any chips in the original ones. Not that many rocks at my stumps but do have some gravel mixed in clay sometimes. The worst thing is looking backwards and down as I back up to the stump at each pass. I usually look and back up, then drop the grinder down a bit, then look forward as I creep the tractor forward. This helps my neck from cramping. I would buy the Woodland Mill again. Very well built.
I've never owned or operated a stump grinder, but a couple of days ago I saw this Reist R25PD stump grinder on Good Works Tractor Co's YouTube channel. It's another Canadian made product. Maybe worth looking into.or would you buy something else and why?