CDsdad
Platinum Member
I'm looking at a P400 Poly hopper broadcast spreader from Agri-Supply. Anybody got one or used one? The picture has Cosmos written on the hopper. What about Agri-Supply? I've never used them. Is there stuff OK?
CDsdad said:I'm looking at a P400 Poly hopper broadcast spreader from Agri-Supply. Anybody got one or used one? The picture has Cosmos written on the hopper. What about Agri-Supply? I've never used them. Is there stuff OK?
Farmwithjunk said:I bought a much more expensive VICON spreader and no longer needed the COSMO.
MFL said:Ditto on Agri-Supply. Top notch folks there. I have ordered from the catalog and spoken with them on the phone and couldn't have had a better experience.
I have a Sitrex all metal 500 lb unit that I bought locally and it has worked out great. I use it about 5-6 times a year, and keep it in the shop when not in use. As greg_g mentioned, it's not the cone you have to worry about, it's everything below the cone. When I'm finished I use the pressure washer for a good, long time and make sure there is NOTHING left on the spreader. After it drys, I give it a very light spray with a teflon lubricant I have (can't recall the name) on the tray and vanes. The thing looks as good as the day I bought it. On the other extreme, we have other re-plants (city folk) down the street from us who give their spreader a cursory squirt with the hose and leave it outside when done. It looks just like you think it looks!
I was wondering that too. Obviously wet contents will be less likely to cling to the poly sides. But the agitator extension also breaks up compaction and clumps. Poly or steel, I think I'd still want the option to install the extension when I think it's necessary.mark.r said:Does anyone know off hand why the agitator (upper) is unessary with the Poly hopper spreader as opposed to the steel version?
I asked the guy at Agri-supply when I ordered mine Monday and he told me that the agitator will wear through the poly hopper eventually. I ended up buying the steel one, it was about 50 bucks cheaper in the end. I figure I just need to make sure to keep in clean and story it in my barn.greg_g said:I was wondering that too. Obviously wet contents will be less likely to cling to the poly sides. But the agitator extension also breaks up compaction and clumps. Poly or steel, I think I'd still want the option to install the extension when I think it's necessary.
//greg//
Makes perfect sense to me. Would have been less confusing though, if they were that honest in the catalog too.mark.r said:I asked the guy at Agri-supply when I ordered mine Monday and he told me that the agitator will wear through the poly hopper eventually.
MFL said:The agitator for my Sitrex is one of many of my 'just in case' tools. When I purchased my spreader, it also came without the agitator. I asked at the dealer why and they said basically the same thing. The agitator will wear away the paint on the inside of the cone and create a rust line where it touches the cone. Over time the rust will wear through and you will end up cutting the cone in half. When the salesman told me this, I thought of the spreader at the farm where we used to board our horses and remembered the rusty groove they had in theirs.
So I bought the agitator, 'just in case', but have never installed it. I have never needed to spread anything that was a powder. Everything I spread is in granular form, and unless my fert. or lime is wet, it drops right through the cone.
So the agitator sits in the original box. On the shelf. 'Just in case'.
MFL said:Mark,
Like they say in the commercials, 'results may vary in your area', but yeah, I would disconnect the agitator and just hold on to it. Even with the main unit out, you can still get a little agitation without damaging the the cone. What I did was run a bolt/washer/lock nut combo through the stubby connector arm that comes up into the cone. This is going to turn regardless of whether you have the agitator connected or not. With this setup, I get a little help breaking up any clumps that may be in the mix, the rest flows out by itself, and I'm not gouging a groove into my cone. Works pretty well for me. Of course If you ever need to spread a powdered weed killer, or powered lime, you'll want to put the unit back on. Powder tends to create a void above the gate and the rest of the powder will just hang above it and not fall through.
I'm actually taking off three days this coming week to re-seed some fescue/clover mix and put down some fert on my pastures. Looking forward to some time on the Kubota.