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You should check out our 5' value series scrape blades with tilt, angle and offset capabilities. Compare the features/specs and you'll find that you get more for your money with our blade.
I just read the reviews on the TSC site. Anyone thinking of purchasing a back blade from them might want to do the same.Tilt is really nice when you are running a blade on a CUT/SCUT. Specifically, unless you are trying to reset the side-side grade on the road, it is much easier to remove the tilt locking pin and let the blade follow the road contours. With such a small tractor (no stones thrown *grin*, I love mine), the hardest part is doing work despite bumps in the road. With a short wheelbase, small bumps (both side-side and front-back) are often magnified and sent back to the implement. Meaning: when the front tires go over a rock, the back digs in... Or when a right tire drops a little low, the right edge of the blade digs in. Keeping the tilt unlocked will mitigate this problem, as will going slow and practice.
The easiest solution, however, for driveway maintenence will be the Land Plane (or Grader, Grader Plane, LPGP... Many names). I found the Land Plane to be in a whole different class for driveway grading and repair. Since it rides on the ground itself, you don't see any of the "bump effects", and its rails keep things nice and smooth. The Rear Blade is a great general purpose implement and I'm not sure what your intended use is, but I just wanted to throw that out there.
I think you will find the Woods, Frontier, Lands Pride and a few other brands will show up as solid choices no matter which specific implement you are talking about. With TSC, you want to check what brand they are re-badging for that implement. For example, the splitters and post hole diggers are re-badged from good manufacturers. It seems like the tillers are split, some are Woods and some are some other manufacturer with a less solid rep. I don't know who makes the rear blade but I hear slightly flimsy feedback (exactly like earlier in this thread). That said, we really do have small tractors and I suspect we'd loose traction before we bent it. I don't think I've read of an actual bad experience from someone in our weight class. So, for me, the thing that would steer me away from the TSC is the lack of blade tilt...
Hope this helps
i have a cat 1 blade on my cat 2 tractor its a 70hp 8300ib tractor the blades an 8 foot frm TSC many folks on here own sub and compact tractors they think them tractor will rip apart cat 1 attachments some cheap stuff yeah that will happen
The cheap TSC blade works fine with the limited cat 1 hitch, atleast with my x749 mower. Lift it high enough without problems.
I am not sure what all I plan on using it for, I know blade snow which we don't get much here in Missouri it would be fine with me if we never got in snow! I have a long circle drive way and seems like the center gets built up and would like to cut it down and grade it too, all the gravel get thrown out of the tracks and going down in my woods. Maybe cut a ditch, not going to get too serious with it, but one person asked me do you want to buy 1 that lasts forever then buy a good one like Landpride. I own a Landpride box scrapper and brush hog already. Called the John Deere dealer and he said the landpride RB1560 is $550 or the RB1660 with tilt is $750.
I am not sure what all I plan on using it for, I know blade snow which we don't get much here in Missouri it would be fine with me if we never got in snow! I have a long circle drive way and seems like the center gets built up and would like to cut it down and grade it too, all the gravel get thrown out of the tracks and going down in my woods. Maybe cut a ditch, not going to get too serious with it, but one person asked me do you want to buy 1 that lasts forever then buy a good one like Landpride. I own a Landpride box scrapper and brush hog already. Called the John Deere dealer and he said the landpride RB1560 is $550 or the RB1660 with tilt is $750.