Drag Harrow (homemade)

   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #11  
I recently took 2- 4 foot long pieces of a mobile home frame and attached a chain bridle to each end of on of the I beams. The second I beam is attached about 6 to 8 inches behind the first I beam. Took some angle iron and made skids on each end of the two pieces. Experimented with weight and about 100 pounds laid on the first beam seams to work the best when pulling with my Toro workman. Neighbor had to take the weight off to pull with his zero turn. It cuts the high spots amazingly well. Does not carry a large amount of material but does a real good job of dressing a rough area. Everything was scrap that I had around so i really just have some time invested in it.
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #12  
You know a heavy chain itself is used for leveling. I would suggest a search on youtube of homemade levelers. I also suggest you ask around and see what in used equipment you can find. You probably will find some sort of used implement with a little searching.
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade)
  • Thread Starter
#13  
I recently took 2- 4 foot long pieces of a mobile home frame and attached a chain bridle to each end of on of the I beams. The second I beam is attached about 6 to 8 inches behind the first I beam. Took some angle iron and made skids on each end of the two pieces. Experimented with weight and about 100 pounds laid on the first beam seams to work the best when pulling with my Toro workman. Neighbor had to take the weight off to pull with his zero turn. It cuts the high spots amazingly well. Does not carry a large amount of material but does a real gIood job of dressing a rough area. Everything was scrap that I had around so i really just have some time invested in it.

I think a 4x4x10 weighs about 50 lbs and I'm cutting it in half to make two members. I may need more weight on it for it to dig in but not sure what I'll use. I take it the skids are to contain the scraped up material within the dimensions of the scraper (keeping it from spreading out to both sides). I was thinking of fastening the angle iron to the 4x4 diagonally so the material sheds to one side toward the center of the driveway. Not sure how easy this will be. I don't have a lot of bits lying around for making this but there is a scrap metal place in town that I might check in to. Thanks.
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade)
  • Thread Starter
#14  
You know a heavy chain itself is used for leveling. I would suggest a search on youtube of homemade levelers. I also suggest you ask around and see what in used equipment you can find. You probably will find some sort of used implement with a little searching.

Youtube was the first place I looked and they have some pretty good ideas. We have a surplus store nearby that sells bulk chain but the cheapest heavy chain ran $2. a foot if memory serves. I'm guessing I'd need 20 1' lengths (10 on each member) The chain would add some weight and do a good job finishing off the surface. I do have a 10' long piece of 2" angle iron that I was going to try to utilize.

In an earlier post to this thread someone mentioned that he fastened plywood atop the two 4x4 members joining them together. I may try this out as well. I'd like this to store easily though. Thanks!
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #15  
Here's a homebrew one I made. At first I used it with my lift boom. It was a little cumbersome, but by changing the chain lengths on the sides it could rotate enough to cast the scrapings right or left. A couple years ago I found an unused blank flange at work and modded it to make it more user friendly.
 

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   / Drag Harrow (homemade)
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Here's a homebrew one I made. At first I used it with my lift boom. It was a little cumbersome, but by changing the chain lengths on the sides it could rotate enough to cast the scrapings right or left. A couple years ago I found an unused blank flange at work and modded it to make it more user friendly.

Now that's what I'm talking about Chim... and it looks like very little welding involved. 👍
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #18  
That attachment is for smoothing stuff out. Teeth are sometimes used, but on the other end of the Kubota.
 

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   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #19  
That attachment is for smoothing stuff out. Teeth are sometimes used, but on the other end of the Kubota.

So retractable teeth would be a bad idea?
 
   / Drag Harrow (homemade) #20  
So retractable teeth would be a bad idea?

Nope, it would be a great idea if I needed them.

The main purpose of the rear attachment is for leveling and smoothing a gravel driveway. Our main driveway has been paved for many years, and the remaining gravel driveway to the shed and propane tank doesn't require any maintenance. We can have any size truck use it regardless of the weather. Our excavating sub used about a foot of gravel (a mix composed of 3" down to dust size) and I topped it once with some 2A modified maybe 15 years ago. When we annexed the 1-1/2 acres on one side of our property about 5 years ago I bought, used and sold a box blade with scarifiers to tame it.

The picture of the rear attachment in my earlier post is from the last time I recall using it. It's from when we put the front sidewalk in a few years back. Even though we never used the front door since we built back in '89, Wifey said we need a front sidewalk with some curves (something about us dying and the kids ending up with a house they couldn't sell because it lacked a sidewalk).

Rather than remove the RFM from the Kubota, I hooked it to the Ford. Some of the area needed a fair amount of fill. The Kubota hauled and roughly graded the fill and then the Ford took over. Following that,, there was very little hand work.

The toothy front attachment was a fun project to come up with something to allow me to reach into the fencerow to clean up brush. It has been pressed into service a couple times to loosen up small patches for re-seeding.
 

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