Hi
New to the forum, so a few newbie questions to get me started.
Ive got a small (5 foot) grader blade that can be rotated 360 degrees. At the moment, what we are trying to do is to remove Kikuyu grass that has grown over a bed of sand within a horse arena. The blade is skipping over the grass rather than pulling through it. I suspect this is due to not enough weight on the blade because of (i) its low mass weight and (ii) being unable to apply any real downforce via the 3-point linkage.
Questions:
1. is this normal - i.e. what one would expect from a relatively small tractor and implement being used through a 3-point linkage?
2. obviously the blade can be rotated to face backwards, but are they intended to be "pushed" rather than "pulled" by the tractor? I'm guessing that the 3-point linkage is designed/engineered primarily for lifting and pulling force, not pushing force. Therefore revering the blade and tractor to "push" the blade would not be a good idea?
3. the blade does not have attachment points for adding rippers. Will turning the blade further to create a narrower working edge, and tilting the leading corner down to create essentially a plough be more effective in cutting through the grass?
Thanks in advance
Cheers
New to the forum, so a few newbie questions to get me started.
Ive got a small (5 foot) grader blade that can be rotated 360 degrees. At the moment, what we are trying to do is to remove Kikuyu grass that has grown over a bed of sand within a horse arena. The blade is skipping over the grass rather than pulling through it. I suspect this is due to not enough weight on the blade because of (i) its low mass weight and (ii) being unable to apply any real downforce via the 3-point linkage.
Questions:
1. is this normal - i.e. what one would expect from a relatively small tractor and implement being used through a 3-point linkage?
2. obviously the blade can be rotated to face backwards, but are they intended to be "pushed" rather than "pulled" by the tractor? I'm guessing that the 3-point linkage is designed/engineered primarily for lifting and pulling force, not pushing force. Therefore revering the blade and tractor to "push" the blade would not be a good idea?
3. the blade does not have attachment points for adding rippers. Will turning the blade further to create a narrower working edge, and tilting the leading corner down to create essentially a plough be more effective in cutting through the grass?
Thanks in advance
Cheers