Rotary mower windrow solution

BKWOOD

New member

Equipment
B7410,FEL,Woods finish mower,rear blade
Mar 3, 2014
5
0
1
Belington,WV,USA
My Kubota B7410 handles the 4 ft. rotary mower fine but I do not like the windrows I am getting. My first mower was a 5 ft. woods finish mower that would have worked ok for my meadow trimming if I could have mowed all my 15 acres before the middle of June and again later in the summer. With a very big vegetable garden requiring a lot of work at the time for the first mowing I realized I was not going to have the time to trim meadows twice a year. So I got the brush hog.
Does anyone have tips or techniques or modifications to prevent the windrows I am getting?
The only thing I have considered was to cut the metal at the rear to open up the discharge area. The design of this mower takes the 4 ft. cut and forces it through an opening about 20" wide.
 

Bulldog

Well-known member

Equipment
M 9000 DTC, L 3000 DT
Mar 30, 2010
5,440
78
48
Rocky Face, Georgia
It's more or less the nature of the beast, that's just how they work. I don't think opening the rear up will do anything for you. About the only thing that I've seen is the side being open. Some of the older cutters had bolt on side panels that when removed it allowed the grass to blow out the side more like a lawn mower.

It does help with windrows but it would also allow anything you hit to be shot out the side like a rocket. As far as safety goes, I would suggest living with windrows. You're not alone, every single spindle rotary cutter out there leaves the same windrows that you have.
 

houser52

Member

Equipment
Kubota M7060HD, Kubota L3600, LA680 Loader
Jul 10, 2015
94
13
8
North Carolina
I have a 5' Hardee and the discharge is completely open in the back. It still throws a windrow that looks like it's ready to be baled.
 

Diydave

New member

Equipment
L2202 tractor, L185f tractor
Oct 31, 2013
1,635
11
0
Gambrills, MD USA
Older model Bush Hog mowers had a removable right side, that let you throw all of the cut material out that side. Great for hay, but would get you pretty dirty using it in small areas. I think the model I have as plan C hay cutter is a 205...:D
 

Retired Iron Peddler

New member

Equipment
GL5460 HSTC, LA1023 Loader, Land Pride 1072 Grapple, RTV 900
Jun 18, 2014
16
0
0
84
Mount Pleasant, TX
I have found that running the rotary mower less than the required 540-rpm PTO speed and traveling too fast across the ground for the conditions results in more windrowing of the cut material. A slower ground speed with the mower running at 540 PTO speed gives the mower blades more time to pulverize and more evenly disperse the cut material.

Bill
 

Tooljunkie

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L1501,home built carry all, mini plow blade.
May 13, 2014
4,150
33
48
60
Lac Du Bonnet, Manitoba,Canada
I cut part of my side panel as grass was doing this, but i only took a small section off. It was balling up under deck.
Two cuts per year will leave lots behind to deal with. I couldnt imagine trying to cut it and have it look like something.

I could see using a sickle mower, would look neater. Somewhat.
 

BKWOOD

New member

Equipment
B7410,FEL,Woods finish mower,rear blade
Mar 3, 2014
5
0
1
Belington,WV,USA
Thanks for the responses. I was afraid there would not be a solution to the windrow problem.
What about flail mowers? I am not familiar with this type of mower. Do they just hang from the 3 point hitch or are there any wheels that ride the ground?
What size would be right for my B7410?
 

coachgeo

Well-known member

Equipment
L225 w/woods Few Mowers & Back Blade, D722 in Motorcycle (Triumph Tiger), LMTV
Nov 16, 2012
2,460
36
48
Southern OH
IMHO..... just use your bush hot like you are. then take another 20-40 min. of your time and run over each Windrow to mulch it a bit more and see how it comes out. You might find that will do you well enough.
 

Bulldog

Well-known member

Equipment
M 9000 DTC, L 3000 DT
Mar 30, 2010
5,440
78
48
Rocky Face, Georgia
Just a thought, do you have any local farmers close by that could cut it for hay. If it's good ground it would be worth their time for 15 acres. It might only get cut 2 or 3 times a year but baling it would keep it much cleaner and healthier.
 

coachgeo

Well-known member

Equipment
L225 w/woods Few Mowers & Back Blade, D722 in Motorcycle (Triumph Tiger), LMTV
Nov 16, 2012
2,460
36
48
Southern OH
15 acres is a lot to run over twice.....
Not suggesting do the "lot" twice..... only to mulch/cut the windrows which I believe would take about 1/4 to 1/3 amount of time of first cut if one overlapped them by about 1-1.5ish foot of each run during first cut. That would put the windrows close enough to one another to hit two at a time on the follow up of Windrow Cut/mulching passes.

Just a thought. You guys know more than I do.
 
Last edited:

ShaunRH

New member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3200
May 14, 2014
1,414
6
0
Atascadero, CA
This is odd. My LP1260 doesn't windrow at all. It pulverizes the material and it just drops to the ground in a rather even dispersion.

Maybe your blades are too sharp? The instructions on my unit are to leave 1/16" purely vertical to the cutting path.

The first pass of the blades don't seem to cut everything, it actually seems to use the entire rotary path to cut which may be why mine doesn't windrow.
 

bcp

Active member

Equipment
BX2360
Apr 20, 2011
644
78
28
SW WA
Try changing the rear deck height. A little higher or lower in back may solve the problem.

Bruce