There is no real single "best" box blade. The soils you work, the contamination (roots, rocks and stuff), the levelness, etc all make it so there are many solutions. And price is a factor !
I have an L3410, same tractor as yours but with a couple more hp. I use a gannon low back industrial box blade with a manual lever to flip down the scar bar. (model H-120) Weight is about 900 pounds. It was made to order and they up'ed the end plates from 3/8 to 1/2. It is a good heavy box that can really grab some dirt.
That is about the max that our tractors can handle.
The roll over's are nice, but not used too much. Most industrial users (construction and landscaping) will opt for the hydr scar bar. But if you don't have hydraulics, the roll over is a good choice. I opted for the H120 for the greater weight and increased theoretical roubustness. (I doubt the L3410 could hurt either roll over or h-120)
Cammond also builds for orders and not for inventory. That's not a bad thing, it's a way to keep costs down. I've seen the cammond box's and they are real close to the Gannon Landscaper line that I have. Just a different tweak here and there. I'd have no reservations getting one of their boxes.
No matter what you get (roll over, manual scar bar or fixed bar) target weight in the 750-900# range if your tractor is 4wd. Down that to 500-750 if it is 2wd. You will also need filled tires (4wd) (and wheel weights if 2wd) for the extra traction to pull a big box. Also, target 5 1/2 ft so you can cover your wheels. 5' is just a tad narrow unless you have ag tires pulled all the way in.
jb
I have an L3410, same tractor as yours but with a couple more hp. I use a gannon low back industrial box blade with a manual lever to flip down the scar bar. (model H-120) Weight is about 900 pounds. It was made to order and they up'ed the end plates from 3/8 to 1/2. It is a good heavy box that can really grab some dirt.
That is about the max that our tractors can handle.
The roll over's are nice, but not used too much. Most industrial users (construction and landscaping) will opt for the hydr scar bar. But if you don't have hydraulics, the roll over is a good choice. I opted for the H120 for the greater weight and increased theoretical roubustness. (I doubt the L3410 could hurt either roll over or h-120)
Cammond also builds for orders and not for inventory. That's not a bad thing, it's a way to keep costs down. I've seen the cammond box's and they are real close to the Gannon Landscaper line that I have. Just a different tweak here and there. I'd have no reservations getting one of their boxes.
No matter what you get (roll over, manual scar bar or fixed bar) target weight in the 750-900# range if your tractor is 4wd. Down that to 500-750 if it is 2wd. You will also need filled tires (4wd) (and wheel weights if 2wd) for the extra traction to pull a big box. Also, target 5 1/2 ft so you can cover your wheels. 5' is just a tad narrow unless you have ag tires pulled all the way in.
jb