Bush Hog Blades

   / Bush Hog Blades #11  
You mean wider?
 
   / Bush Hog Blades #12  
It is possible you are over torquing them.

The bolts on my bushhog 306 (which takes a 1-11/16" socket) only have a torque spec of 450 ft-lbs.

I am guessing 950 is a tad much.


IF you have a way to measure (or guesstimate closely), use your breaker bar and cheater pipe and only apply about 100-120# of force at a distance of 48" from the center of the socket head. That should get you over 400#. and with a castle nut, that should be more than enough.
I really cant figure out why anybody would think 450 on a 1"+ hi strength bolt was tight. :confused2:
 
   / Bush Hog Blades
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Pardon my shock/ignorance, but WTF did you come up with that procedure?
You have a driver that provides a (somewhat) known torque, and then you go to a breaker bar and wait for it to "start to give" - what exactly does that feel like, anyway?

I'd check your torque specs in the manual (or a standard chart for your hardware size) and roll with that. 950 seems way high for an application like that. $0.02

I come up with that procedure from living 54 years on the farm and working on equipment all my life...
Anybody that has used breaker bars long as I have know when they are at their limits based on the pull...
I know what it feels like...

I would like to thank everyone for their input...
I will go with a lock washer and lock-tite...
 
   / Bush Hog Blades #14  
Why do you want them so tight?

Yes, with a lock washer, you need it tightened down. But with a castle nut and cotter pin, I would think that the last hole you can reasonably access would be fine. The blades are supposed to swing freely.
 
   / Bush Hog Blades #15  
I would have to check, but aren't the blade bolts spec'd a lot lower than the center stump jumper bolt? I think that 450 figure is for the center bolt.

Nope. Thats Bushhogs spec for my blade bolts. Not the center stump jumper bolt.

Actually the manual (like alot of manuals) lists a generic torque chart in the back cased on fastner size. And the 1-1/8"-12 (which is what the blade bolts are) spec is 890 ft-lbs for grade 5 and 1444 ft-lbs for grade 8. and a 1-1/2"-12 like my stump jumper lists ~2100 and ~3500 ft-lbs respectively.

So the 450 ft lbs for the blade bolts, is way under what the bolt can actually handle.
 
   / Bush Hog Blades #16  
I would have to check, but aren't the blade bolts spec'd a lot lower than the center stump jumper bolt? I think that 450 figure is for the center bolt.

Nope. Thats Bushhogs spec for my blade bolts. Not the center stump jumper bolt.

Actually the manual (like alot of manuals) lists a generic torque chart in the back cased on fastner size. And the 1-1/8"-12 (which is what the blade bolts are) spec is 890 ft-lbs for grade 5 and 1444 ft-lbs for grade 8. and a 1-1/2"-12 like my stump jumper lists ~2100 and ~3500 ft-lbs respectively.

So the 450 ft lbs for the blade bolts, is way under what the bolt can actually handle.
 
   / Bush Hog Blades #17  
Why do you want them so tight?

Yes, with a lock washer, you need it tightened down. But with a castle nut and cotter pin, I would think that the last hole you can reasonably access would be fine. The blades are supposed to swing freely.
The joint is made by a shoulder bolt seating in a fitted socket. Joints can move. If they move they wear and get loos[er] without the nut turning. All parts in a joint that wear are then damaged and consequently less sutable for their purpose. Ample tightness will keep the joint from moving.
larry
 
 

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