quadridermx
New member
Hello, I apologize if this has already been asked and covered, but I spent over an hour searching and couldn't find an answer.
I recently acquired a JD 4600hst 4x4 tractor and absolutely love it. I have been looking in the realm of very small 3 point hitch backhoes for some landscaping around my property, but am definitely weary of a 3ph hoe.
A very nice, low hour 49 series backhoe just came up for sale locally and I can get a tremendous price on it. It comes with a subframe for a 5200 tractor. My operator manual lists the 47 and 48 backhoes as the only backhoes for a 4600 tractor.
I realize the 49 backhoe is designed for the 5000 series tractors, but would it be a decent fit for a 4600? I already have a power beyond kit on the tractor.
Both my wife and her father are boilermakers/welders, so I know we could *make* it fit. But would that be a bad idea...?
Anyone have any idea what the weight difference is between a 48 and 49 hoe? I couldn't find weight specs for them.
Any help is appreciated! Thank you
I recently acquired a JD 4600hst 4x4 tractor and absolutely love it. I have been looking in the realm of very small 3 point hitch backhoes for some landscaping around my property, but am definitely weary of a 3ph hoe.
A very nice, low hour 49 series backhoe just came up for sale locally and I can get a tremendous price on it. It comes with a subframe for a 5200 tractor. My operator manual lists the 47 and 48 backhoes as the only backhoes for a 4600 tractor.
I realize the 49 backhoe is designed for the 5000 series tractors, but would it be a decent fit for a 4600? I already have a power beyond kit on the tractor.
Both my wife and her father are boilermakers/welders, so I know we could *make* it fit. But would that be a bad idea...?
Anyone have any idea what the weight difference is between a 48 and 49 hoe? I couldn't find weight specs for them.
Any help is appreciated! Thank you