Auger Sizes

   / Auger Sizes
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#21  
I will disagree. 9" & 12" are so close to each other I wouldn't 't buy both unless you are planning on a ton of digging or just have excess money to spend. If you plan on using something larger than a 4x4 then get a 12" but if not get a 9". I have a 9" and 18". The 9" has worked for the hundreds of fence post holes I have dug and the only time I have used the 18" on fencing was for setting some 6.5" pipe for an entryway. Other times it just gets used for setting sono tube footings, I-beams, planting trees, etc.

Don't misunderstand me 9" and 12" have their place and if you were doing a ton of fencing with a lot of small and larger fence posts then buying both might make sense but from what I gathered from your post the wasn't the case.

Good point, luckily I haven't ordered anything yet. Do you think 20hp PTO is capable of running a 18" auger though? That was my concern....
 
   / Auger Sizes #22  
I don't know. I run mine on a 100hp skid steer with a hydraulic auger. 20HP is probably on the weak side depending on your soil. With an extension I have dug 8' deep holes with my 18" auger.

I wasn't necessarily recommending an 18" for you, I was just saying there isn't a lot of difference between a 9" & 12" for infrequent use. I wouldn't want to dig 500 12" holes for 2-3/8" pipe fence posts but if you only had a few to do it will work fine. I would rather spend my implement budget on other goodies than both a 9 & 12 unless you had a specific need.
 
   / Auger Sizes #23  
I was just going to post a question: "Will a 6" Auger work for 4x4 Posts ?
Assuming the surrounding material is solid !
Also, I assume a 6" Auger will actually end up cutting a larger hole than 6" !

A second question: "If... the 6" Auger cuts a larger hole than 6", can we also assume a 6x6 Post might work with this sized Auger ?

Reading all of these "postings", is there an accepted standard for the size of the hole vs the post size !
My first Auger will be the 6", seems like most things I do should work with it !
 
   / Auger Sizes #24  
Hey folks,

Planning to buy a post hole digger in the next few weeks :)

What size augers are worth buying with the implement? It will just be used for lifestyle property on a Kubota B26, so nothing too extreme or high powered.

I also figures the 'hydraulic assist' post hole digger might not be worth the extra $ in this case as I only have a small tractor.

Options are: 6 inch, 9 inch, 12 inch and 18 inch.

Also considering getting a few spare blades / tips for the augers.

Cheers! :)

I bought a 24" diameter auger for my 25 hp CUT so I could plant several trees.

I learned to attach a hand winch to the ROPS to get the auger out of the ground if I dug too deep.

Regards,

Yooper Dave
 
   / Auger Sizes #26  
I bought a 24" diameter auger for my 25 hp CUT so I could plant several trees.

I learned to attach a hand winch to the ROPS to get the auger out of the ground if I dug too deep.

Regards,

Yooper Dave

Yikes!
I guess it works.
Until it doesn’t.
Man, I’d be very careful you don’t torque those ROPS too much.
I’d imagine a stuck auger could win that battle on some days.
 
   / Auger Sizes #27  
I bought a 24" diameter auger for my 25 hp CUT so I could plant several trees.

I learned to attach a hand winch to the ROPS to get the auger out of the ground if I dug too deep.

Regards,

Yooper Dave

I need to use a 24" auger if I avoid hiring a backhoe to dig some piers for a cabin I'm building. Obviously the auger could be a less messy hole too.
I can rent the 24" auger bit for $100 weekly and already own a PHD with a 12" bit.
The ground involved will have some "casual" rocks but no rock shelf present. The rocks that show up on the surface there are sandstone and sedimentary, having dropped in from a cliff maybe 100' above this bench in the woods and deposited when Fred Flintstone lived nearby.
My tractor is a Kioti DK35SE with nearly 40hp. IMO rocks may stop some holes, not all in the 9 I need to dig.
i gotta say I'm a bit nervous on that large of a auger! With the 12" I used a spud bar for leverage thus two people involved.
I'd like to hear others comment on the use of that tractor and a 24" auger bit? Me thinks a backhoe may make sense?
 
   / Auger Sizes #28  
I run an 18" auger with a 50 hp tractor in clay soils. I do have to be careful I don't screw it into the ground because it is a b___h to get back out, but otherwise there's plenty of power and probably more than I need. Be sure it's in contact with the ground before you start to turn it of course. The 10 hp difference between your tractor and mine isn't that big of a deal (for 18" auger) - another 1/3 (6") is a lot, but for $100/ week I'd give it a try. If it doesn't work out, then go the backhoe route. BTW, 9 holes isn't that many and you should be able to dig them with a PHD in a day or two even with occasional rocks.
 
   / Auger Sizes #29  
I have a 9" auger for 4x4 posts and I find that either I am not good at measuring or that sometimes the slight angle I get from the auger, the post won't sit centered that I need to have some wiggle room for the posts. I think I am going to go with a 12" auger inthe near future.
 
   / Auger Sizes #30  
Does anybody know where to get an auger smaller than 6"?

My soil is often so hard I can't even get the tip started - I mean the casting that looks like the end of a wood screw. I have round river gravel cemented together by clay. Many years ago I did a painfully big project with a 4 handle handheld auger and 3 of us, and we were actually using a masonry bit to drill pilot holes to get it started.

I'd like to find a 2" or so drill bit long enough to penetrate a couple feet into the ground. A masonry bit might work, or perhaps a drill bit intended for metal.

Another possibility would be more weight on the assembly. I haven't had a convenient point for hanging weight so perhaps that what I should try next.
 
   / Auger Sizes #31  
More on this -- I see I can buy carbide masonry bits around 40" long and 1.5" diameter for around $270. I'd have to make some kind of adapter if I wanted them on the tractor auger, as they have special splined shanks to fit a rotary hammer tool. Not sure I could handle them in a rotary hammer drill by hand, especially pulling back out.
 
   / Auger Sizes #32  
I have a pile of augers that are 5 long and around 3 in diameter. The have 1-5/8 hexagonal connections on the ends.

Good bits for them are around $60 each and the auger sections are around $200 each. You would need an adapter made to fit them on a tractor auger. I get them at Mobile drill.

The bits you want are the two prong mining bits.
 
   / Auger Sizes #33  
I have a BX2660 so same engine and PTO size as original poster . I went with 9 inch auger and in clay have got that badly stuck and the tractor overwhelmed. Large pipe wrench and pipe on handle to reverse it out. I hate to think what a bigger auger would be like . Keep in mind that even if your post size is tight for a 9 inch …..you can have more wiggle room to get them vertical by moving forward and back with tractor while auger is in ground to make upper part of hole larger.
 
   / Auger Sizes #34  
Does anybody know where to get an auger smaller than 6"?

My soil is often so hard I can't even get the tip started - I mean the casting that looks like the end of a wood screw. I have round river gravel cemented together by clay. Many years ago I did a painfully big project with a 4 handle handheld auger and 3 of us, and we were actually using a masonry bit to drill pilot holes to get it started.

I'd like to find a 2" or so drill bit long enough to penetrate a couple feet into the ground. A masonry bit might work, or perhaps a drill bit intended for metal.

Another possibility would be more weight on the assembly. I haven't had a convenient point for hanging weight so perhaps that what I should try next.

Here is one for 30 bucks.

https://www.amazon.com/AuSable-Bran...nt=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-640958895754&psc=1
 
   / Auger Sizes #35  
I have a pile of augers that are 5 long and around 3 in diameter. The have 1-5/8 hexagonal connections on the ends.

Good bits for them are around $60 each and the auger sections are around $200 each. You would need an adapter made to fit them on a tractor auger. I get them at Mobile drill.

The bits you want are the two prong mining bits.

Wow. Looking through the products at https://mobiledrill.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/CFA-Pages.pdf now. Seriously impressive. Of course it should have occurred to me, people drill through all kinds of rock and wicked soil. It's expensive but I kind of want to go for it just to mess with augers this serious.
 
   / Auger Sizes #36  
   / Auger Sizes #37  
 

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