L4060 - which rotary cutter?

   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #11  
Good for you.

Those of us in reality arent gonna limit a 3800# tractor with a 2800# lift cap at 24" to a mere 1000# 5' cutter. The manual is conservative, kubota knows it, dealers know it, "most" owners know it. It has nothing to do with "failure analysis", or any of that BS. Its simply kubota using a CYA policy. Nothing more, nothing less.

Not sure what "play mow" means. Must be a new term. But I mow 250-300 acres a year with a hog commercially. Last tractor (kubota L3400) was 2600# and 29 PTO HP and I mowed thousands of acres with that carrying a 1100# 6' mower. Now have a 8' 1600# that is the same basic frame as the GLxx60 tractors. HST allows me to go infinity slow. After 300-400 acres with this machine now, I have yet to wish I had a smaller cutter.

And not sure why you feel kubotas published lift specs are irrelevant? they give a capacity, and a distance. Do some math will you? Then you would realize how foolish you sound.

Statics and dynamics are in your future.

SDT
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #12  
My B-7800 pulls a Woods BB60X in hill country with no difficulties. Your 4060 could easily handle the 600X IMO. I would have no problem running it!
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #14  
My L4060 with R4s has a 66" track at the narrowest. Mine is set to a 72" track. Generally you want an impliment that will cover your tracks.

My L3200 was half the weight & pulled a 60" light duty rotary. I wouldn't go any lower than a 72" if I were getting a rotary. I have a 7' old beat to **** Ford 917 flail I ran on both tractors. Gonna replace it with another flail.

I hear the 7' flails are just to long & awkward, so most people skip them & go to a 8' dual spindle.
Er 7' rotary cutters, not flails. My 7' flail is nice size wise.
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter?
  • Thread Starter
#15  
The manual lists about 900 lbs max for a rotary cutter.

I'm interested in opinions regarding the brands. I'm already an engineer, really not interested in debating physics...

I'll probably buy the EA unless a great deal pops up on a used cutter. EA has s 5-6 week lead time though...
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #16  
The manual lists about 900 lbs max for a rotary cutter.

I'm interested in opinions regarding the brands. I'm already an engineer, really not interested in debating physics...

I'll probably buy the EA unless a great deal pops up on a used cutter. EA has s 5-6 week lead time though...

If you read the manual for their suggested implement limitations.......like a 900# max rotary cutter......it makes you wonder why they boast about such a high lift capacity of 2800# @ 24"???

I dont remember what my manual says, and I dont have it handy......but the limitations are probably the same as yours since its the same frame. And i think it limits to something like a 7' disc, 6' rear blade or box blade, 2-14 plow, 72" finish mower, etc. Just way too conservative to be practical.

All the cutters you mentioned are good cutters with a solid company backing them up. You really cannot go wrong with any of them. Obviously the more the cutter weighs the heavier it its built, and will likely stand up to cutting thicker stuff.

If all you are cutting is weeds and grass, than even a light duty cutter will work just fine. But if you start clearing dense briars, tree saplings, etc....thats where you want as heavy of a cutter as you can.

But all the cutters you list, being all 5' cutters......they are all too rich for my blood. 5' cutters come up on craigslist in my area all the time. ranging in price from $100 to $600 and likewise ranging in condition from needing alot of work to in pretty good shape.
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #17  
It's time to cut the weeds so some grass can grow...

Going to run a 5' cutter so nothing sticks out past the R1 tires.

Choices:
1. Landpride RCR1860 for $1650 + tax
2. Woods BB60X for $1800-2000 + tax, haven't finished negotiating this price yet
3. USED Woods BB600X for $1800 - about 140 lbs (15%) heavier than my 3-pt is rated to lift for a rotary cutter
4. Everything Attachments with the slip clutch and 75hp gear box for $1695

The new cutters are all pretty much the same 10 gauge decks, 1/4" walls, 65-75hp gear boxes.

The used BB600 is a beast of a mower, giving that one some serious thought. Not too worried about it being a little overweight.

What do you think?

Woods and Landpride have good reputations as does Bush Hog. I know nothing of the EA brand so will reserve comment.

Woods, Bush Hog and Landpride make light, medium and heavy duty cutters. Of course both weight and price increase as you move up the line. The BB600X is the middle line. This would be considered very HD by most. Their HD line is intended for state highway crews and other commercial businesses having semi skilled operators who care nothing about their owners equipment. I can think of no reason why any land owner/farmer who does not do commercial work on unknown land with hired operators would even consider the "HD" line.

Considering your choices, I would factor in dealer location and support. In my area we have a good CNH/Kubota dealer who also sells Bush Hog, Woods and Landpride. I bought all of my 2 Woods mowers from this dealer and they have treated me well. Within the last few years they have been pushing Landpride, probably because of the relationship between Kubota and Landpride, or maybe they just make more profit when they sell Landpride.

I know that you have your reasons for limiting your mower width to 5' but will again state that most folks like their mower to extend a bit beyond the max width of the rear tires so as to completely cover the wheel tracks. All 4 of my mowing set-ups have mowers that cut at lest a couple of inches outside of my tire spacing.

That said, rather than spending serious money for a HD 5' cutter that may be beyond the design specs of your tractor, why not buy a low cost, light weight, 5' cutter, such as a King Cutter, Howse, Hawk Line,or other inexpensive line.

My expectations are that you will soon want a light weight 6' cutter, and HD 5' cutters do not sell well.

SDT
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Found a 5' Woods for $750 and a 6' Woods for $1400, haven't tried to negotiate yet.

Planning to mow the weeds after the excavator cleared the land and take it through some wooded areas to clear bushes, not real thick. Plenty of sticks and small limbs to chop that haven't made it into a burn pile yet.

Long term, I'll buy a flail or finish mower. The RC is the right tool for right now.
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter? #19  
I'll vote for a lighter 6 foot cutter. I have a Land Pride 1860 and its tough as nails and slow as snails. Good for trimming around things.

As far as the weight thing goes I had a Rhino tw96 on my L4200 years ago. That is a very heavy twin spindle cutter. Never had a issue with it but I ran it simi mount. If your worried about wear and tear on your hitch you can run it simi mount and the mower tire will always take half the weight. You just raise it up and set the rear wheel where you want it. You then remove the top link from the mower. You now have a simi mount mower.

I would be VERY carful buying a used cutter. They can be so abused, and not show it, that your just buying trouble. If your doing mostly weeds the lightweight 6 footer will work fine. After you mow some with it you'll be wishing for a 7 footer!
 
   / L4060 - which rotary cutter?
  • Thread Starter
#20  
Found a 2014 BB72X WOODS for $1800 all-in. Probably go that way. Pics look good. Its at a dealer. Hard to say if it is as good as the pics show or not.
 

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