Imold
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2019
- Messages
- 806
- Location
- West Central Mn.
- Tractor
- MF GC1705, Cub Cadet RZTL, Husqvarna Rider.
It would not let me post reply
Hey Jim, yeh I seen you post that before. That second pic looks promising for my purposes.
Here's what I'm gonna be dealing with:
View attachment 631980View attachment 631981
I knocked all this down last time with a walk-behind brush hog I rented. You can't see it, but around 8 ft into that jungle is a wire fence I put up, that's also when I planted the trees in there.
I would dive right in, if you want you can even sharpen/clean up the teeth a bit more with a grinder but they are pretty sharp from factory.
They've posted several videos on their Facebook group literally destroying the piranha bar and attempting to destroy their own tooth bar. To the extent of if I saw anyone subjecting either one to the abuse I would question if they should even own a tractor when they clearly need/desire a dozer.Yeh man, I think I'm gonna go for it.
Everything Attachments, I think your pricing should be more competitive with Bxpanded's toothbar, at least for starters. Theirs is a proven design with many satisfied customers, actually I've yet to read many negative reviews of the piranha bar. Haven't found many reviews of your tooth bar at all. How is your product an improvement over something Bxpanded is already doing just fine? That's what you need to demonstrate. Harder steel, so what? Their's is hard enough for the task per their customers. How's your tooth pattern any better than theirs in a real world application? Maybe make some videos showing all that? Not meaning to call you out, but you came on this thread, so here's your chance to sell us on your product.
Well hey, they could post that video here, there you go. I suppose that harder steel would come in handy with a big tractor that could take the abuse, but a scut with a smaller bucket, nah.They've posted several videos on their Facebook group literally destroying the piranha bar and attempting to destroy their own tooth bar. To the extent of if I saw anyone subjecting either one to the abuse I would question if they should even own a tractor when they clearly need/desire a dozer.
Well hey, they could post that video here, there you go. I suppose that harder steel would come in handy with a big tractor that could take the abuse, but a scut with a smaller bucket, nah.
One would think if you don't want to spend the extra 100$, then simply don't? But then again, 100$ over the lifetime of a decade that person keeps a tractor.....10$ a year. Isn't all that much when you look at the facts of the (2) types of steel used in both tooth bars. I think for the price of a BigMac meal for a decade I'll choose metal that's darn near twice as strong when it comes to digging into gravel/stone, trees, roots, dirt, etc regardless of the size of tractor I'm using.
Regarding the review comment, one would naturally assume a product that has been on the market for 5+ years vs one that's been on the market for a few months would have considerably more reviews wouldn't you think?
Yes, exactly, one's been around for a while now, proven design, with many very satisfied users. Actually, over 200 5-star reviews on their website alone...literally nobody bitching about how they wish it was more than what it is. But then here comes the other guy, new to building this product, who says he builds it bigger/badder. Again gonna say it, so what? It could have sparkly sprinkles in it, but if it does what the other one does, who cares?Regarding the review comment, one would naturally assume a product that has been on the market for 5+ years vs one that's been on the market for a few months would have considerably more reviews wouldn't you think?
I could afford an extra $100, but you gotta sell me on it's worth for MY application,