What did you do to or on your Kubota today?

Old_Paint

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LX2610SU, LA535 FEL w/54" bucket, LandPride BB1248, Woodland Mills WC-68
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When the county cut in this sewer line along the north side of our creek about 20 years ago (eminent domain is such a lovely concept) they put a silt fence using T posts on the downslope side. The cloth part is long gone but the T posts remain. Wife had wanted them gone for years. I sort of agree most of them should go. Now that I’m retired, figured I should get to work on it, but it’s been too wet to do it without tearing up the ground until the past few days.

Pulled about 100 yesterday afternoon by myself. Adult son helped today and we got around 100 more in an hour and a half or so this afternoon. About half done now, but have all of them out of the areas where there’s a reasonable possibility of someone accidentally running the Mule or tractor into one of them.
View attachment 129884
The little T post puller plate thing isn’t exactly a miracle gadget, but it does beat wrapping a chain if you’re pulling hundreds of posts. We originally got it for pulling about 500 T posts and associated silt fence at our church a few years ago. View attachment 129885
I like the puller. Simple, but should be very effective. If made from hard steel and sharp edges left on the cutouts, it should bite the posts pretty well. I take it you have some sort of SSQA adapter for the chain? Do you use the curl to pull, or just the lift?
 

Old Machinist

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Kubota LX3310 cab, JD 4310, NH 575E cab backhoe, JD F725, Swisher 60", etc.
May 27, 2024
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NE FL
Did my first mowing with my Kubota LX3310/Swisher combo and it worked great.

swisher-kubota1.jpg


I started the day tweaking the install on the Kubota's MMM. It wasn't adjusted properly when it was installed and had some parts left bouncing around under the right belt cover. I installed the left off parts and adjusted the lift rods per the manual. The book setting for blade height turned out to be dead on after it was adjusted correctly. The gauge wheel holes specified for a 3" blade height were 3" on one side and 2-7/8" on the other. You can't get much closer than that. (On second thought I guess I can tweak the lift rod on the low side and get it dead on.) I had put new blades on the MMM the day before. I used Oregon gator blades on it and had to go to the dealer for an extra set of Bellville washers. Kubota has a special shouldered bolt and stepped washer with two Bellville washers on each blade. The Oregon blades were 0.40" thinner than the stock blades and spun when the bolts were tightened so I stacked a third Bellville washer under them. While at the dealer I discovered they had Kubota branded gator style blades that were as thick or thicker than the blades I removed. I will price those for consideration next time.

Before starting with the Kubota/Swisher combo I mowed around the areas I wouldn't be able to get to with my John Deere F725. I had to wear a face mask and goggles and was in a cloud of dust. Made me really appreciate the cab and AC when I got to the tractoring part.

The Swisher connected to the Kubota is a lot more controllable than it was connected to my finish mower. I can make clockwise turns around most of my trees and get right up against them where I can't with just the cab and MMM. I may still tweak the tongue one day. On sharp left turns it would get caught under the 3pt lift arm and I would have to raise the 3pt briefly to get it unstuck. It doesn't back up as predictably as it did connected to the finish mower but there isn't much reason to have to back up anyways. I'm getting a 10 foot wide cutting path and you can't tell the difference in cut quality between the two mowers.

Have I mentioned how well the AC works in this Kubota? It was mid 90s yesterday and I had to adjust the temp and fan speed because I was getting too cold.

I don't care much for the orange color and having to wear my 3M blue tooth hearing protection. The hydro whine isn't much louder than my JD and the engine is quieter but for some reason the ratcheting cruise control mechanism increases the hydro wine 10 fold. It's a common complaint on this model. I was having to use the hearing protection on my open station 4310 anyways. Life is full of compromise.
 
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Old_Paint

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LX2610SU, LA535 FEL w/54" bucket, LandPride BB1248, Woodland Mills WC-68
Dec 5, 2020
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Did my first mowing with my Kubota LX3310/Swisher combo and it worked great.

View attachment 129894

I started the day tweaking the install on the Kubota's MMM. It wasn't adjusted properly when it was installed and had some parts left bouncing around under the right belt cover. I installed the left off parts and adjusted the lift rods per the manual. The book setting for blade height turned out to be dead on after it was adjusted correctly. The gauge wheel holes specified for a 3" blade height were 3" on one side and 2-7/8" on the other. You can't get much closer than that. (On second thought I guess I can tweak the lift rod on the low side and get it dead on.) I had put new blades on the MMM the day before. I used Oregon gator blades on it and had to go to the dealer for an extra set of Bellville washers. Kubota has a special shouldered bolt and stepped washer with two Bellville washers on each blade. The Oregon blades were 0.40" thinner than the stock blades and spun when the bolts were tightened so I stacked a third Bellville washer under them. While at the dealer I discovered they had Kubota branded gator style blades that were as thick or thicker than the blades I removed. I will price those for consideration next time.

Before starting with the Kubota/Swisher combo I mowed around the areas I wouldn't be able to get to with my John Deere F725. I had to wear a face mask and goggles and was in a cloud of dust. Made me really appreciate the cab and AC when I got to the tractoring part.

The Swisher connected to the Kubota is a lot more controllable than it was connected to my finish mower. I can make clockwise turns around most of my trees and get right up against them where I can't with just the cab and MMM. I may still tweak the tongue one day. On sharp left turns it would get caught under the 3pt lift arm and I would have to raise the 3pt briefly to get it unstuck. It doesn't back up as predictably as it did connected to the finish mower but there isn't much reason to have to back up anyways. I'm getting a 10 foot wide cutting path and you can't tell the difference in cut quality between the two mowers.

Have I mentioned how well the AC works in this Kubota? It was mid 90s yesterday and I had to adjust the temp and fan speed because I was getting too cold.

I don't care much for the orange color and having to wear my 3M blue tooth hearing protection. The hydro whine isn't much louder than my JD and the engine is quieter but for some reason the ratcheting cruise control mechanism increases the hydro wine 10 fold. It's a common complaint on this model. I was having to use the hearing protection on my open station 4310 anyways. Life is full of compromise.
The newest LX models are supposed to have addressed the hydrohowl with a new transmission design. I’ll agree, my 2019 LX2610SU has quite a howl, but it still beats hell out of my silent axe, shovel, pitchfork, bow saw, and wheel barrow. Only slightly more noisy than the little 6HP chipper/shredder with the WC68 on the back. I did as much deadfall and brush cleanup in an afternoon with the LX as what I did in the previous 5 years. As you say, compromise. Blown up rotator cuffs and old age are compensated for by listening to a bit of noise. That’s what hearing protection is for.
 
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mcmxi

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***Current*** M6060HDC, MX6000HSTC & GL7000 ***Sold*** MX6000HST & BX25DLB
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I wanted to provide some additional information re the 3-1/2 hours of work that I did this past Friday. I don't typically keep accurate records for fuel consumption, but since this was a paying job I paid attention. By my calculations the MX was using around 2.85 gallons/hour running wide open at 2,600 rpm on flat ground and pulling a flail. I built a lot more cushion into my pricing than that so this first test was successful in that I didn't lose my a$$ on fuel costs.

The M6060 sips fuel compared to the MX so I'm even more confident in my numbers for jobs using that tractor with a nice cushion for unexpected costs.
 
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pokey1416

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Jun 24, 2020
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Neighbors wanted their beach tilled again this year, gets me a case of beer so I’m in. I really like this time of year because I take the FEL off to work drives, rototill and drag. The ole K handles like completely different machine and front visibility is amazing. I’ll have to put it back on soon as it’s BH92 season.

Hope everyone has a great summer!

IMG_2024-06-02-165227.jpeg


IMG_0711.jpeg
 
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Siesta Sundance

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I wanted to provide some additional information re the 3-1/2 hours of work that I did this past Friday. I don't typically keep accurate records for fuel consumption, but since this was a paying job I paid attention. By my calculations the MX was using around 2.85 gallons/hour running wide open at 2,600 rpm on flat ground and pulling a flail. I built a lot more cushion into my pricing than that so this first test was successful in that I didn't lose my a$$ on fuel costs.

The M6060 sips fuel compared to the MX so I'm even more confident in my numbers for jobs using that tractor with a nice cushion for unexpected costs.
There are always unforseen costs...

I have been burned on a couple side jobs, lost about $2,300, customer not wanting to pay after completing(I should have filed a lien), and one that was never happy because he was breathing, he became a true oxygen thief to this world, people want chit for free in this world. I always go beyond my scope of work for every job. I also didn't want a BS or negative review on my google website, I damn near did that job for free. And that POS dude was supposedly an Army Retired Veteran as well.
 
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NCL4701

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L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
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I like the puller. Simple, but should be very effective. If made from hard steel and sharp edges left on the cutouts, it should bite the posts pretty well. I take it you have some sort of SSQA adapter for the chain? Do you use the curl to pull, or just the lift?
The chain is a short piece of 5/16 transport chain with a grab hook on one end and nothing on the other. The puller plate has a 5/16 chain slot on one end. Chain is attached to the loader by wrapping the hook end around something on the grapple or fork frame, whichever happens to be on at the time. Boom gets about 90% of them, even those that are stuck so hard the spade part of the post pulls off. Curl gets another 9%. The other 1% gets hooked to the 3 point. About 900 fence posts so far and there’s no visible wear other than paint scuffs on the puller plate, does NOT slip (unless you put it on backwards), and I have yet to run across a T-post that I can’t pull unless I can’t get the tractor to it. Happened to see it at Tractor Supply for about $10 right before we started the church silt fence project and figured it was worth $10 if it was even 10% faster than wrapping a chain. It’s probably more like 50% faster. Not a big deal if you’re pulling a couple dozen posts. Kind of a deal if you’re pulling 1000.
 
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NCL4701

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L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
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Central Piedmont, NC
Started one of the few post retirement projects that is a “because I want to”, and no other reason. If I never did this one, I don’t think anyone else would care at all.

We have about 40 acres north of the creek that splits our property. The houses, pond, public road, etc. is on the south side. When the sewer line was put down the north side of the creek many years ago, it created a pseudo-road in the creek bottom. We’ve mowed it routinely so it’s still passable on the part we own. The acreage north of the sewer line consists of a mostly flat plateau with 100 year old short leaf pines on the west end (they were logged off then so they’re all about the same age) and a varied mix of hardwoods on the east end. There are several trails in the south side but none other than the sewer line on the north. So about half our acreage has always been accessible only by foot, and even then without any trails at all, so it is rare anyone ever goes there. I’ve always thought that was a bit of a shame although I have no specific reason to access that half of the property. Not trying to build a real road, just a path sufficient for routine use walking, traversing with Mule, and accommodating tractor for maintenance at least when reasonably dry.

Part of the issue has always been getting out of the creek bottom up to the plateau. Viewed from the creek bottom, it’s like an eyebrow window; about even on both ends and about 50’ at its highest point near the middle. By far the most reliable all season creek crossing is in the middle due to topography on the south side making the ends unfriendly to wet weather. Springs emanating from the end of the plateau create wet weather passage issues on the sewer line.

So a couple weeks ago I spent some time scouting for either a viable new wet weather crossing on the east end past the eastern spring or a viable trail out of the creek bottom in between the springs that bracket the current crossing.

Found a spot not far from the current crossing that I could get the Mule or L up, but a large white oak that fell in a windstorm about 5 years ago was blocking it. In the pic below, the new trail is headed up the slope to the left. The dirt area where I side sloped a path into the berm on the sewer line is on the right. Just past view on the side sloped trail, that berm weeps about 75% of the time.
IMG_2517.jpeg

Grapple was very helpful clearing the white oak in three chunks rather than little man sized pieces. That tree had been down 5 years and the root ball still fell most of the way back in the hole. Surprisingly, the wood was still solid enough I may take some or all of it back to the wood yard for firewood now that I have adequate equipment to get it there. The old Ford N and Farmall H we were running when it fell had no chance of getting something that big across the creeks so we left it in favor of lower hanging fruit.
IMG_2518.jpeg

When I got past the tree, the hillside was thick with little sapling like these and mature witch hazel clusters. Not sure if witch hazel is a shrub or a tree but each stalk seems to max out a little over 1” diameter and about 12’ high at most. Had originally planned to use chainsaw and weedeater with blade but still had the bush hog on the tractor so drove it up the slope and bush hogged everything. I could not have gotten the old N up that slope with the bush hog behind it even if the path was already cleared. No problem crawling all over it with the Kubota in 4WD.
IMG_2524.jpeg

Should have taken some pics at the time but I kind of got engrossed in it and didn’t think to take any. This is pretty much what I ended up with for the path out of the creek bottom.
IMG_2519.jpeg
IMG_2525.jpeg

For now this is as far as my new little trail goes. It’s still quite a ways to the edges of the property regardless which way you go as this is near the geographic center of the property. It’s also one of the more sparsely vegetated areas. The more challenging areas lie ahead. But at least now I’ve gotten out of the creek bottom and onto the plateau while it was dry enough to get the tractor over there without tearing up the ground.
IMG_2521.jpeg

IMG_2523.jpeg

Next step is to keep heading north to the northern border with as little collateral damage as practical. I’ll be scouting on foot with surveyor tape in hand to lay it out before continuing.

And yes, I’m sure a high flow CTL with a forestry mulcher would be swell but not going that route unless it’s a lot worse than I suspect. We have a couple miles of trails on other areas and haven’t needed a forestry mulcher yet.
 
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Magicman

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M4900 Utility Special 4WD e/w FEL & 1530 John Deere "Traveling Man"
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I am back to cleaning up the mess from my two "tree removal" trees.

IMG_5882.JPG

And the term "mess" is descriptive. There is one Red Oak log on the left and two Post Oak logs hidden on the right. That plus firewood from both.

IMG_5884.JPG

This Red Oak log is junky; it's crooked plus the top end is fractured from the fall. Maybe I can at least get a short 4X4 from it.

IMG_5885.JPG

It is easier for me to use my ledger stick and mark the firewood lengths before bucking.

IMG_5883.JPG

Another bucket load of rounds going out. I am loving that Stihl MS261 more with each use.

IMG_5887.JPG

Some of the firewood will need splitting and it all will have to be wheelbarrowed into the woodshed for stacking. Red Oak is my most favorite firewood and Post Oak is my most non-favorite. That loose bark makes a mess when bringing it in to the fireplace insert.

IMG_5886.JPG

There are two more Post Oak logs to be skidded out; one good one and one poor one. Then the remaining Red and Post Oak firewood to be bucked and brought out.

I quit at noon today. Did not get through.....just quit. Tomorrow will be tomorrow. I am 6 weeks from my 81st Birthday and that is reason enough. ;)
 
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GreX

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BX2380
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Interesting, never saw a beach tilled before. For a case of beer, why not😎
The beaches near me use something like this, like a tiller on steroids, works amazingly well, leaves nice soft sand in its wake - although they use New Holland tractors, so no orange :(
 
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pokey1416

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The beaches near me use something like this, like a tiller on steroids, works amazingly well, leaves nice soft sand in its wake - although they use New Holland tractors, so no orange :(
That is pretty cool. We’re 20 minutes from Lake Michigan but I’m not sure what they use to clean and condition the beaches we visit.
 

The Evil Twin

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Jul 19, 2022
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Helped a neighbor find his crushed drain tile line. I just scooped up the gravel with the L machine. His dad's mini did most of the work.
20240603_181924.jpg
 
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forky

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L2501 HST 4X4 8N
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I am back to cleaning up the mess from my two "tree removal" trees.

View attachment 129997
And the term "mess" is descriptive. There is one Red Oak log on the left and two Post Oak logs hidden on the right. That plus firewood from both.

View attachment 129998
This Red Oak log is junky; it's crooked plus the top end is fractured from the fall. Maybe I can at least get a short 4X4 from it.

View attachment 129999
It is easier for me to use my ledger stick and mark the firewood lengths before bucking.

View attachment 130000
Another bucket load of rounds going out. I am loving that Stihl MS261 more with each use.

View attachment 130001
Some of the firewood will need splitting and it all will have to be wheelbarrowed into the woodshed for stacking. Red Oak is my most favorite firewood and Post Oak is my most non-favorite. That loose bark makes a mess when bringing it in to the fireplace insert.

View attachment 130002
There are two more Post Oak logs to be skidded out; one good one and one poor one. Then the remaining Red and Post Oak firewood to be bucked and brought out.

I quit at noon today. Did not get through.....just quit. Tomorrow will be tomorrow. I am 6 weeks from my 81st Birthday and that is reason enough. ;)
Nice job with the firewood at your age. It's what keeps you young and spry.
I have a Stihl MS 271 and also just love the saw. It's cut 100's of face cords of wood over the years.
 

Magicman

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Nice job with the firewood at your age. It's what keeps you young and spry.
I have a Stihl MS 271 and also just love the saw.
Thank You, I had to look the MS271 up and found that it is the "Homeowners, Farm Boss" version of the 50cc saw. My MS261 is about 6 months old and is starting to loosen up and really throw some chips.
 
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g_man

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Feb 3, 2023
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Did the 1400 hr Oil/Filter/Lube on my M5640. New to me since 700 hrs. First time I made a mess. Only half went in the drain pan. The rest spread all around the loader mount frame.

P1170765.JPG



So I made a deflector out of a piece of angle and have used it since.

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gg
 
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