Okay, well, it's not beautiful, but it sure works better.
I've been doing some trenching with my backhoe to re-route my well line and add some outdoor irrigation points (frost hydrants). Running into a lot of small roots, like half to 1 inch buggers. Occasionally bigger, but run into a bunch of those smaller ones together and it can slow things down with a small machine like the BX25.
I took a look at the bucket, got out my angle grinder, and beveled the edges of the bucket. I saw a significant improvement in my digging speed. Seems like a small thing, but it made a very noticeable difference. Part of the difference was cutting through roots, but part of it was just cleaner trench walls, which meant less time spent cleaning out loose stuff.
Definitely worth my time to do the beveling. If I had to do it over again, though, I'd put the bevel entirely on the inside. I think that would work even better, keeping the "cutting" edge to the outside of the bucket.
I've been doing some trenching with my backhoe to re-route my well line and add some outdoor irrigation points (frost hydrants). Running into a lot of small roots, like half to 1 inch buggers. Occasionally bigger, but run into a bunch of those smaller ones together and it can slow things down with a small machine like the BX25.
I took a look at the bucket, got out my angle grinder, and beveled the edges of the bucket. I saw a significant improvement in my digging speed. Seems like a small thing, but it made a very noticeable difference. Part of the difference was cutting through roots, but part of it was just cleaner trench walls, which meant less time spent cleaning out loose stuff.
Definitely worth my time to do the beveling. If I had to do it over again, though, I'd put the bevel entirely on the inside. I think that would work even better, keeping the "cutting" edge to the outside of the bucket.
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