yelbike
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2011
- Messages
- 1,596
- Location
- Near Winnipeg, Mb, Canada
- Tractor
- John Deere 2305, 2320,Z465
Thanks for last few posts. No pun intended. Now I still want to purchase a digger!
My thoughts exactly. If I have to go rent something that I will probably use several times it has to cost a lot more than the weekly rental rate.I had a fence to put in, I have more fence to put in.
I don't work as fast as I used to, so renting kinda' makes me uneasy.
Either I rent it for quite a while, or I work to hard to get it done and hurt later. It's not in me to hire some-one (Personality Defect I got from my Dad!) if I can do it myself.
<snip>
If your hydraulics can handle it, AND you don't mind if a post isn't perfectly straight,
A post driver is much faster <snip>
Yea, but when your transplanting trees it sure makes them short![]()
"I just bought the Tractor Supply Countyline digger with a 9" auger and have it hooked on my Bobcat CT235. I drilled my first hole in dry, hard clay to find a challenge. The only challenge is keeping the auger out of the ground. That thing will bite and screw itself into the ground so fast you can't hardly believe it. I let it dig a little bit then pull it up to clear the hole then repeat. It made that dry clay into something the consistency of finely ground coffee. We made a hole that ended up being a little over 10" across and 50" deep. The auger is really easy to assemble, easy to check and fill the gearbox oil level, uses a basic 80W90 gear oil (which is nice because it's what I consider one of the "staples" of the garage). It has a cast iron gear case and comes with a nice little plastic tube to hold things like the owners manual and extra shear bolts. The unit runs a standard sold everywhere grade 5 bolt for a sheer bolt on the drive shaft. I find that hooking and unhooking is easy by sitting the tip of the auger on the ground, then slowly backing up as the implement goes down which nicely folds the auger underneath the frame and it's right down on the ground to unhook. Easy stuff.
And on pricing. I was out the door with the implement and one auger for right at $600. I priced a bobcat with a 9" auger and it priced out at $3000. Koyker (I think that's what he said the brand was anyway) was exactly the same money after some rebate or another. A skid loader mount auger is also $3000 so for the time being I bought the cheap 3 point unit with hopes of someday upgrading to a skid loader auger. (Of course I need a skid loader first)
BTW, I think that these are nice augers with replaceable teeth and the screw guide on the bottom for the price. With the augers priced at about $100 you can afford to have 3 different sizes sitting in the shed for when you need them. That would be harder to do with the better, name brand augers that run $1000 each size. I'm a contractor and drill maybe 12-20 holes for deck footings at a few different sites each summer and if I can not rent a skid loader with an auger for one job I just paid for this 3 point auger so it works for me."
I've got a different name brand PHD but Rudevette's comments are right on the money and exactly like my feelings about my PHD and its use. I couldn't have said it any better!! It works just fine on my TYM273 with pto at idle speed.
Greg