kantuckid
Platinum Member
Mine works fine as I know where it is in relation to my bucket lip or forks.
Question for those of you who use a bucket level indicator frequently. If I add one, I wonder how to deal with my bucket issue of going a little too high or too low when picking up mulch? I use the decal on the bucket, now. And I am almost always on a slope when scooping. My mulch pile is on a 15-20% slope while my dirt pile is on a sorta level spot.
With mulch, going in with the bucket flat on the ground and appearing level, per the decal, I am apt to dig into soil. Nudging up the bucket is apt to leave 1-2" of mulch. Lately what I am trying is to put the bucket flat and level, per the decal, slightly nudge it up and/or slightly raise the lip (curl).
For such uses, or just for my newbie abilities, would it be best to make "level" on an indicator actually .5-1" high? So that when the bucket read level, you could just go. Of course, I might leave a lot of mulch? Maybe I should not worry about 1" left until the end and back drag.
I just have a feeling I'll be monkeying with an indicator as much as I do now, getting "level" and then inching the bucket up, going too high, and then nudging it back down . . . It wouldn't save much if any time.
To level the bucket I just file a groove in the rod and from experience I can make small adjustments to compensate for the ground.
Mine is similar but a longer tube with a slot with notches cut for different implements, bucket level is different to hay spike levelMy bucket indicator is a tube and rod. I had the same issues you have, and did not want to cut the rod. I put a piece of 3/4" pex with a notch cut out on the tube. With the bucket on the ground and level adjust the pex so the rod is even with the end. The notch in the pex is so you can see how far below level the rod/bucket tip is.
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