Box Scraper Beginners guide to using a box blade

   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #161  
Yeah, I was definitely out of place in the city, LA area; but not so much down here in the country side. Now I have only two neighbors on my road, no traffic jams, smog, or people telling you what you can't do. I got 25 acres, but I can't farm it as water cost is the killer; 4 times higher than my old house. No matter, I finally got the shop space of my dreams, a 5,000 sq ft insulated steel building, for my machine, fabrication and welding shop.
Jenkins, that's some beautiful work; that green drag is the business; I was thinking of building something like that. I don't really need grades that nice though; couldn't do that here any way, since there is not 10 sq feet outside of my shop slab, that is close to level. I live on the side of a hill, all 25 acres and about half of that is granite boulders as big as a house and too steep to even walk on. It tapers out on parts of the bottom end, but still plenty of slopes over 25 degrees, where a tractor can't go. The place was neglected for about 8 years, after the San Diego fires came through, and the roads are just passable with 4wd due to run-off erosion and mud bogs when it rains. If I can get those filled in and possibly re-crowned, I should be done with it for the rest of my days. I Shot or trapped out most of the ground squirrels already, (about a hundred), and talked my neighbors into doing the same, so I can flatten/fill the hundreds of burrows, before I step in one and break my neck; Without the squirrels and bunnies, maybe the rattlers will leave now too, and I will be able to grow a small garden. The gophers are the newest problem in that regards. I've tried smoke bombs, and traps with zero luck; everything but explosives molded in the shape of cute female gophers, like "Caddy Shack".
Still planning on borrowing my neighbors 6 foot box to see how I can work it.
Yes, I am getting better with the front loader. I have figured out how to tip-out some of those bigger 300 pound rocks, and drag the bucket to flatten. doing it in float though leaves a roller coaster effect, so I tip the bucket down about 45 degrees and adjust the height as I go. It doesn't look like Jenkin's field, but it fills in the ditches so you can easily drive a city car on it.
 
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   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #162  
Forks set close together work well to dig out boulders also good to pick up stumps too. Also if you can weld/fabricate you can build a land plane grader scraper for about $125/ft of length.
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #163  
Man Las Cruces is really growing, I am headed there this afternoon from Ruidoso, seems like it is bigger every time I go.
I'm constantly finding new businesses and such where there used to be empty fields a few years ago. Crazy.
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #164  
Forks set close together work well to dig out boulders also good to pick up stumps too. Also if you can weld/fabricate you can build a land plane grader scraper for about $125/ft of length.

Forks? what forks? I only have a front loader bucket with a straight front edge. I get up a little speed, tilt the bucket about 10 degrees and drop it into the ground, so the momentum helps get some depth, before it hits the rock, then curl up the bucket while pushing hard against it with the HST. There is not enough traction to just push the bucket in....the ground is usually too hard. sometimes if the rock is too big, it stalls the curl hydraulics and I have to give up on it.
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #165  
Yeah! Steve A, you've been outed and you might as well just give up and move to Texas. Your governor wants to replace you with illegal aliens anyway.

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Well now that you have made it a Texas vs. California issue, I offer this...

CA vs TX.jpg
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #166  
Thought I would post a few pics of a job done this month, small pasture with flood irrigation that I graded with a .250 % slope. First two pics of the field after grading three and four of the box blade, did not use the land plane on this field. The fifth picture is the adjacent field where I used the land plane after the box blade, you can see it makes the field a wee bit smoother. The last two pics are of the land plane used for this, I built this in 2009 to smooth out my rear lawn. While I do use a Topcon laser and receiver this work was all done without machine control, manual operation only. Will be adding the machine control and hydraulic wheels when this project is completed and collected. Point is that there is no way I could get these results if I did not have a good view of the entire box blade when working it.

Edit to add location is the Hondo valley in New Mexico, lots of old western movies used this area as their setting.

Beautiful work! Nice looking dirt too. Send some of that over this way, would ya?
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #167  
Thought I would post a few pics of a job done this month, small pasture with flood irrigation that I graded with a .250 % slope. First two pics of the field after grading three and four of the box blade, did not use the land plane on this field. The fifth picture is the adjacent field where I used the land plane after the box blade, you can see it makes the field a wee bit smoother. The last two pics are of the land plane used for this, I built this in 2009 to smooth out my rear lawn. While I do use a Topcon laser and receiver this work was all done without machine control, manual operation only. Will be adding the machine control and hydraulic wheels when this project is completed and collected. Point is that there is no way I could get these results if I did not have a good view of the entire box blade when working it.

Edit to add location is the Hondo valley in New Mexico, lots of old western movies used this area as their setting.
Many of us on here can 'talk the talk'. You sir, can definitely 'walk the walk'. That is a work of art.
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #168  
Well now that you have made it a Texas vs. California issue, I offer this... <img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/files/attachments/388229-beginners-guide-using-box-blade-ca-vs-tx-jpg"/>

Good One! :-D

Sent from my iPad using TractorByNet
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #169  
RDrancher and Ford850,
Thanks for the nice comments on the pictures. We should be planting all of this next week in Tall Fescue.
 
   / Beginners guide to using a box blade #170  
RDrancher and Ford850,
Thanks for the nice comments on the pictures. We should be planting all of this next week in Tall Fescue.
 
 
 
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