MtnViewRanch
Elite Member, Advertiser
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2005
- Messages
- 10,691
- Tractor
- Mahindra 7520, Mahindra 3215HST, Case 580 extendahoe, Case 310 dozer, Parsons trencher, Cat D6,
Land planer might be another consideration.
As has been said, WEIGHT is where it's at when talking box blades. I found that with my 84", which is 1,200lbs, and an hydraulic top link I can angle it and peel up sod: I actually get sod rolling up and on to the front of the box blade which only adds to the effectiveness as that increase weight. Have hydraulic scarifiers (rippers), but soon found out that they work better at anchoring the tractor than in tearing up the ground! (raking the box blade to have the rear cutter dig in is more than sufficient in tearing up soil, for me that is). Although it's not real efficient, a box blade can do pretty well at grading, but in reverse!
Grass/sod is just plain tough to deal with! Unless one has a dozer you're not going to be peeling it up quickly.
This past summer I sold a 6' back blade that I'd gotten in a package deal when I was after a box blade for my B7800. I doubt that in the 4 years that I had it I'd only used it a total of maybe 2 hours. On the other hand, my box blade has been used extensively. While I have a bit of a driveway it doesn't get out of shape. A back blade will never bite down as hard as a box blade.And regarding weight, a box blade tends to provide good weight for ballasting (increase traction, in the elevated position!, and for counterbalancing loader work). Back blades tend to be wider, a good bit wider than the tractor, which means running around with one on the back all the time presents increased risks of snagging stuff.
All said, however, I think it's best to first concentrate more on what tasks you need to do than on which of two implements is better than the other.
Things need to be kept in perspective, A 1200lb rear blade will cut every bit as good as a 1200lb box blade, if not better. People tend to always think of box blades being heavier than rear blades, but as long as a person compares apples-apples instead of apples to oranges you then get a true perspective.
This reminds me of threads where a person is complaining about the quality of a Land Pride rear blade and how poor it is due to various reasons. Well since Land Pride has 10 different levels of rear blades ranging from 120 lbs to 2400 lbs and about everything in between, just which blade is it that the person is complaining about and what machine does that person run it behind to be complaining about it?
As long as the implement is sized correctly for the machine that it will be used with, then that is all the capability that should be expected. My 100lb rear blade that is used behind my 16hp garden tractor sure as the sun rises in the east every morning does not work like the 1140lb rear blade that I use behind my 75HP 12,000 lb tractor.
Everyone's needs are a bit different, a lot of people get implements and then never use them, or rarely use them. Why, lot of reasons, but I suspect that a large amount of the time it's because the person simply got the wrong implement. I notice that a lot of people don't care for their rear blades much, they don't cut in and or just bounce along the ground. Well why is that, wouldn't have anything to do with the weight of the implement now would it?
I know that I use my rear blade at least 10 times to one for my box blade and both are 1000lb+ implements. Different needs for different circumstances-conditions.





