Adventures in "Tractoring"......5-6hrs in......

River19

Well-known member

Equipment
B2601, RB1560, BB1260 and BX2830 blower
Sep 10, 2020
323
475
63
NH/VT NEK
So with somewhere near 6 hours on the B2601 so far I gotta say I love it. Overall a very easy tractor to operate but of course it hasn't been without its "moments".

In the first couple hours I graded the 450' up hill section of the driveway with the rear blade as it only needed some minor work to knock down the center hump and spread the material back to the tire treads............worked beautifully.

Quick hitch came this week, and I knew getting one of the "cheaper" models would come with some hiccups but after losing 2 hrs to a combination of dropping my box blade on an unlevel spot to the friggin top hook needing to meet the grinder I can say I believe I have the thing dialed in. I got the hitch from Northern Tool and besides the top hook needing to be "opened up" to allow the top bushing to seat properly the little grips on the handles are held on with unicorn tears and hopes and dreams........they flew the hell off in minute #3. Need to put some hairspray under there to slip them on and hold.....

That being said, in the middle of the QH battle I was distracted and found out what happens when the corner of the loaded meets a tire on the horse trailer.......the tire lost badly. After dirty looks from my wife........it gave me an excuse to later use the pallet forks to lift said trailer back on the hitch block and swap to the spare.

After all this crap I got the bottom 50' regraded with the box blade, contoured for better drainage and filled in some pot holes and low spots. I also opened up the drainage ditch a bit. Phase 1 of improving a couple drainage issues. I also started building a tractor road around the woods edge to avoid having to navigate in between the two trailers and A/C unit/house on the other side.

Learning curve..........climbing the curve slowly....

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PaulR

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Equipment
BX 23S -- 100 hours seat time so far
Aug 3, 2020
581
457
63
Hadley, MA
:D Live and learn. Could have been worse right?
First day or two I had mine I was swinging around to park in the garage, nailed the edge of the garage with the bottom edge of the bucket. Seems that sticks out farther than the top edge I was looking at. :ROFLMAO:
 
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retired farmer

Active member

Equipment
tractor, loader, cutter, blade
May 25, 2020
167
86
28
sheridan
So with somewhere near 6 hours on the B2601 so far I gotta say I love it. Overall a very easy tractor to operate but of course it hasn't been without its "moments".

In the first couple hours I graded the 450' up hill section of the driveway with the rear blade as it only needed some minor work to knock down the center hump and spread the material back to the tire treads............worked beautifully.

Quick hitch came this week, and I knew getting one of the "cheaper" models would come with some hiccups but after losing 2 hrs to a combination of dropping my box blade on an unlevel spot to the friggin top hook needing to meet the grinder I can say I believe I have the thing dialed in. I got the hitch from Northern Tool and besides the top hook needing to be "opened up" to allow the top bushing to seat properly the little grips on the handles are held on with unicorn tears and hopes and dreams........they flew the hell off in minute #3. Need to put some hairspray under there to slip them on and hold.....

That being said, in the middle of the QH battle I was distracted and found out what happens when the corner of the loaded meets a tire on the horse trailer.......the tire lost badly. After dirty looks from my wife........it gave me an excuse to later use the pallet forks to lift said trailer back on the hitch block and swap to the spare.

After all this crap I got the bottom 50' regraded with the box blade, contoured for better drainage and filled in some pot holes and low spots. I also opened up the drainage ditch a bit. Phase 1 of improving a couple drainage issues. I also started building a tractor road around the woods edge to avoid having to navigate in between the two trailers and A/C unit/house on the other side.

Learning curve..........climbing the curve slowly....

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Ouch ! on the trailer tire. Congrats on the tractor, you are living the dream.
 

ken erickson

Well-known member

Equipment
B7100 hst, 2650 front mount snowblower, L2501 hst qa loader
Nov 21, 2010
1,000
1,556
113
Waupaca Wisconsin
I was distracted and found out what happens when the corner of the loaded meets a tire on the horse trailer.......the tire lost badly.
Nice tractor and post!

The first winter that I had my B7100 and back blade I was cleaning up snow around the walk out basement doors and "hooked" my never freeze hose bib with the corner of the blade. Like it never existed ,lol, popped that puppy off in a wink.
 
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Nicfin36

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Equipment
L2501 HST, BH77 Backhoe, SSQA Loader ZD1011 Mower
Jun 19, 2019
1,014
457
83
Decatur, AL
You've accomplished quite a bit. Amazing how much you can do with the proper equipment.

Well, I will tell my story. Last week, I was backing into my barn. I have to make a 3 point turn essentially to get in. Well, as I go from reverse to forward, my loader bucket catches the edge of the sliding door. It almost knocks it off the track, breaks the 2X4 edge of the door and tears a gash in the barn siding. I was incredulous. I realized later with the ground being muddy, the tractor did not turn like I thought it would and it hit the door.

Yep, live and learn.
 
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River19

Well-known member

Equipment
B2601, RB1560, BB1260 and BX2830 blower
Sep 10, 2020
323
475
63
NH/VT NEK
Certainly seems like a lot of people have had that bottom corner of the bucket grab something it wasn't intended to.......hopefully it is the only time I do that.......that being said, I'm not dumb enough to be surprised if I do it again along the line. Hopefully it won't be on something expensive.....

I'm going to do a little more grading closer to the garage......which hopefully I don't hit lol

Trying to get some stone delivered to dump in the drainage ditch before I have to take the FEL off for the snowblower.......
 

NCL4701

Well-known member

Equipment
L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
2,533
3,618
113
Central Piedmont, NC
I would list off all the stuff I’ve hit over the years to try to make you feel better but there’s probably a limit on the length of these posts and I’m sure I’d max it out. I’d be thankful all I took out was the tire rather than knocking the crap out of the rim and bending the axle or busting a spring.

Kind of on a side note, I’ve had R1’s and R4’s but never thought turf tires were good for anything but mowing until I started reading a bunch of posts in this forum. Really impressive what you’ve been able to do with your machine.
 
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random

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Equipment
L3301, bucket, backhoe, grader, plow, harrow, cultivator
Nov 2, 2020
717
401
63
NC
One thing I've discovered since getting mine: there are a lot of things you haven't thought of that you'll find it useful for. I got mine to maintain my road. I've found all sorts of uses for it, that I never imagined.
 
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Surfer

New member

Equipment
Kubota B2601
Sep 24, 2020
21
4
3
East Texas
I am right there with you. I have 19 hours on mine-mostly mowing. I have replaced several pickets on my fence once already. Paying attention the the grass more than the front loader.
 
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bird dogger

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Vendor Member

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Kubota B2650 and lots of other equipment
Feb 24, 2019
1,571
1,416
113
North Dakota
It's a rare individual that's never had an "OOPS!" on their tractor. I had just put the Pirhana tooth bar on my tractor when just a few days later putting the tractor away in the shed, that dang tooth bar stuck its teeth out and sliced the corner of the door's metal trim while pulling into its stall. The metal trim is gray in color and I'm thinking some JB Weld might be a perfect fix and color match to boot.

Yup, I think you're more likely to find an "Honest Politician" before you could find an accident free tractor owner! :LOL:
 

PaulR

Well-known member

Equipment
BX 23S -- 100 hours seat time so far
Aug 3, 2020
581
457
63
Hadley, MA
The other downside:
Summer patio project, I thought I was going to lose 15 pounds easy moving all this gravel in place. Nope, didn't lose a pound, tractor did all the work, in fact I think I gained since the tractor has a cupholder.
 
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Nicfin36

Well-known member

Equipment
L2501 HST, BH77 Backhoe, SSQA Loader ZD1011 Mower
Jun 19, 2019
1,014
457
83
Decatur, AL
The other downside:
Summer patio project, I thought I was going to lose 15 pounds easy moving all this gravel in place. Nope, didn't lose a pound, tractor did all the work, in fact I think I gained since the tractor has a cupholder.

I have made that observance as well. Physical exertion has greatly been reduced and efficiency greatly increased, whether one might consider that a good or bad thing.
 

random

Well-known member

Equipment
L3301, bucket, backhoe, grader, plow, harrow, cultivator
Nov 2, 2020
717
401
63
NC
It's a rare individual that's never had an "OOPS!" on their tractor. I had just put the Pirhana tooth bar on my tractor when just a few days later putting the tractor away in the shed, that dang tooth bar stuck its teeth out and sliced the corner of the door's metal trim while pulling into its stall. The metal trim is gray in color and I'm thinking some JB Weld might be a perfect fix and color match to boot.

Yup, I think you're more likely to find an "Honest Politician" before you could find an accident free tractor owner! :LOL:
Reminds me of the old saying about motorcycle riders:

There are two types of motorcycle riders: those who have dropped a bike, and those who have not dropped a bike - YET.
 
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NCL4701

Well-known member

Equipment
L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
2,533
3,618
113
Central Piedmont, NC
I have made that observance as well. Physical exertion has greatly been reduced and efficiency greatly increased, whether one might consider that a good or bad thing.
When I was about 20 the owner of the house I rented had about a half acre in back that he had let get out of control with 2” to 3” saplings and it bothered me so in exchange for a free month rent, I bought a bush axe, cleared it in a couple of afternoons, and hauled the brush to the local dump in my roommate’s pickup. When my father found out, he told me, “When you’re young and strong you use a $20 bushaxe. By the time you’re too old and busted up to use a bushaxe hopefully you have enough money to do the same job with a bush hog.” I now have a rotary cutter, grapple, and 6’ rake. It wouldn’t take me long to clear that 1/2 acre now but I wouldn’t burn many calories. As usual, my father was correct.
 
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Nicfin36

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Equipment
L2501 HST, BH77 Backhoe, SSQA Loader ZD1011 Mower
Jun 19, 2019
1,014
457
83
Decatur, AL
When I was about 20 the owner of the house I rented had about a half acre in back that he had let get out of control with 2” to 3” saplings and it bothered me so in exchange for a free month rent, I bought a bush axe, cleared it in a couple of afternoons, and hauled the brush to the local dump in my roommate’s pickup. When my father found out, he told me, “When you’re young and strong you use a $20 bushaxe. By the time you’re too old and busted up to use a bushaxe hopefully you have enough money to do the same job with a bush hog.” I now have a rotary cutter, grapple, and 6’ rake. It wouldn’t take me long to clear that 1/2 acre now but I wouldn’t burn many calories. As usual, my father was correct.

Wise words from your father. So, true. I think back on my use of brute force to do something, the chainsaw running, brush dragging and so forth I did years ago. Thank goodness I have been able to afford equipment to get things done easier. I only wish I could have had it 10 years ago, because I have had to simply ignore doing some things as they were just too much, even for my younger self.
 
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Henro

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B2910, BX2200, KX41-2V mini Ex.
May 24, 2019
5,155
2,367
113
North of Pittsburgh PA
Wise words from your father. So, true. I think back on my use of brute force to do something, the chainsaw running, brush dragging and so forth I did years ago. Thank goodness I have been able to afford equipment to get things done easier. I only wish I could have had it 10 years ago, because I have had to simply ignore doing some things as they were just too much, even for my younger self.
I don't know. But 3" saplings are something I would find difficult to deal with with my tractor/brush hog...No skid plate underneath to protect the vitals...and even backing over them might be difficult with my Woods BB60.

Agree though, that as we get older the energy we had when younger depletes...

Edit:

Thinking about it, if like me the OP may be remembering 3" when the reality was really 1.5" :LOL::ROFLMAO::LOL:

Been there, done that!
 

bird dogger

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Kubota B2650 and lots of other equipment
Feb 24, 2019
1,571
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North Dakota
Well, I don't know if I'd call a 3" caliper tree a "sapling" either. :unsure: But he did mention he use a brush axe. 🥵

That reminded me of when us brothers were young and sent out to clear brush and small trees around the farm and pastures. We made a game of it. We were armed with a sharp axe and a good bow saw. We'd size up the tree and one of us might say, "I can cut that tree down in 20 strokes". Another brother would say, "You wimp, I could cut that tree down in 18 strokes!". This went on 'til no one dared to try best the other and then would say, "Then cut that tree!". If the axe was the weapon of choice then it was wagered in how few chops it would take to fell the tree. We became pretty good at guessing just how much effort it would take to fell a particular tree/brush. And the one with the most bragging rights was always the most tired that evening! 😂 Bragging rights were more important for the oldest brother and not so much for myself and other brother! LOL!!
 

NCL4701

Well-known member

Equipment
L4701, T2290, WC68, grapple, BB1572, Farmi W50R, Howes 500, 16kW IMD gen, WG24
Apr 27, 2020
2,533
3,618
113
Central Piedmont, NC
I don't know. But 3" saplings are something I would find difficult to deal with with my tractor/brush hog...No skid plate underneath to protect the vitals...and even backing over them might be difficult with my Woods BB60.

Agree though, that as we get older the energy we had when younger depletes...

Edit:

Thinking about it, if like me the OP may be remembering 3" when the reality was really 1.5" :LOL::ROFLMAO::LOL:

Been there, done that!
Are they bigger a few decades later... Could be some of that. 🤔

And my L4701 is a little stouter than a B2910. In reality I might have to use the grapple instead of the rotary cutter on 3” stuff. The rotary cutter is rated for 2” and I’ve used it for stuff that big, but 3” might be a bit much.
 
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