ovrszd
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- May 27, 2006
- Messages
- 32,246
- Location
- Missouri
- Tractor
- Kubota M9540, Ford 3910FWD, Ford 555A, JD2210
You can get new tractors for under $10k. You can use loaders that are crooked or have warn pivot points. You can run a motor that burns oil as well. But if bought a NEW tool and found it to be bent I'd return it.
With regards to dirt work. For years we have been using lasers to establish grade. Much less than 1/4". As for me personally- I need all the help I can get.
Some of us would be fine making cabinets with a Skil saw- maybe even do a great job! Some would be OK with a wobble in their drill press or a crooked fence on the table saw. That stuff would drive me nuts though. I also want to use quality tools and equipment when doing a task- I find joy in that.
If an OP started a post and said "hay I can get a great deal on a BB because it's bent a little" I'd have a different answer. But new- no way!BBs last decades- a good one will long outlast the tractor. Why start with one that is bent?
Suggesting the cutting blade will wear flat in a few hours is an interesting idea- let me know how that works. 1/32" an hour- so that's 1" every 32 hours of use. So a new blade every 50 hours or so? I haven't seen the brass cutting blades you are suggesting but I'm betting they are a little more money than the ones made with hardened steel. I guess in this application it would be worth the extra expense.
You danced all around that. Clouded the question with smoke. I'll take that as a NO.