Before & After

   / Before & After #1  

IrTxRx

Silver Member
Joined
Apr 9, 2004
Messages
249
Location
Central Texas
Tractor
Power Trac 1430
I wanted to start a thread that shows what our projects looked like before we started and the end results after application of our PT's and their various attachments. So many times everyone on the board is so excited to get on their tractor that we only get AFTER pictures. This makes it a little difficult to get visual information for how much work our tractors can do.

Case in point, my driveway used to look like a creekbed and is now smooth. The amount of work that my new baby did is impressive to me, but I forgot to take the creekbed picture... oops.

I went out and took a bunch of pictures of areas that I expect to be working on in the near future. That way, I will have a file to refer to when I excitedly get on the tractor and take the after picture.
 
   / Before & After
  • Thread Starter
#2  
Before --

Record rainfall in Central Texas let native bluestem grasses grow 6ft high
 

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   / Before & After
  • Thread Starter
#3  
After --

2.5 hours later, burp the baby, and finish the job.

4 acres of 6 foot tall prairie grass, 1 broken blade after 30 minutes of mowing, 35 chewed up old cedar stumps because the mower mows WAY to low for a brush cutter. Still, I LOVE MY MUT!!!

My grass seemed to mow a little better when it was just barely damp, FWIW

Also, My front casters are FILLED from the factory. But I don't think my grease zerks are going to last long...
 

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   / Before & After #4  
Greetings,

Would it be in bad taste to show a before and after of the PT-429 before and after I use the CT322 for it's first application?

Love,

Steve
 
   / Before & After
  • Thread Starter
#5  
scarg said:
Greetings,

Would it be in bad taste to show a before and after of the PT-429 before and after I use the CT322 for it's first application?

Love,

Steve

Perfect...let 'er rip

Edit - oops, just assumed that you were doing another awesome mod on the 429 before I read your other post...But, yeah, I think it is part of the story. I would guess only a hundred or so PT posters and five have gone back to regular CUTs that I can think of off the top of my head.
 
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   / Before & After
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Before...nope, forgot to take pic
After...nope, remebered to take pic before I was through

BRAFTER --

removed a shrub that grows like crasy and makes it hard to mow no matter how much I prune it back every year. It is about 6 inches in diameter with medium sized root ball. Lackender hoe with grapply, no problem and bye-bye shrub
 

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#7  
Before -

big hill of kaliche (caliche) road base and I need material for my drive
 

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   / Before & After
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Before (road base hill, con't) --

I love my PT, but one of its biggest weaknesses is brute force (or lack thereof) so what to do... Minihoe, possible... teeth on grapple, probly not... Potato digger, sounds good... but wait, the roar of the 2cylinder engine the whine of the PTO and the glint of sunshine off 24 carbide tipped teeth, enter the wheel trencher

Man I love yhis attachment. It is truly impossible to appreciate this machine unless you have tried to dig in our central texas soil (e.g. clay/rock).
 

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  • Thread Starter
#9  
After (road base) --

Two hours of tractor time later and the PT has a new parking space. The deminsions are (4' X 8' X 14') / 2 which is 224cubic feet which is pretty close to a 10 yard dump truck of material (PT already saved me $150, yeehaw).

After the initial cutting fun with the wheel trencher, I also used the lackender hoe. However, i found that the best tool was the potato digger. Mainly it was best because of speed. Drop the LM bucket, pick up he potato digger and rip the hill a little, stab the digger in the ground and un hook, back to the bucket. Unpowered implement to unpowered implement wins the day (but turning the wheel trencher up and driving into the hillside was still the most fun!!!).


BTW -- check out the awesome parking job (if I do say so myself)!!!
 

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  • Thread Starter
#10  
Before (my road is a son-of-a-ditch)

Our 1/4 mile drive has not had any maintenance since it was cut in 1992. I forgot to take pics of the drive, but basically it looked like a creekbed, because it had become the ditch. I got all the potholes filled in, now I just need to get new ditches cut before (if) it rains again.
 

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