Yes, I've reached him and gotten details. Thanks.
I have the wheels, both front and back, set as wide as they will go, and both front and back are loaded. I always use front weights when working in the field with the loader off.
Really? I don't have a whole lot of area that flat. The steepest part is about 24 degrees, which I've been mowing up and down for 12 years and not seen any indication of the rig getting unstable. I do avoid sidehill operation when it gets over about 18 degrees.
You're saying to run the Bushhog with the side rails dragging the ground? That would leave terrible ruts straight up an down the hill which would soon erode into gullies.
But they can't cut the matted grass if it's laying above the level of the cut, can they? If they are turning in the direction that pushes down on the flattened grass, how well can they pick it up and cut it?
No, that was in direct response to my question about picking up the grass matted by the tires.
They normally use reverse rotation, but offer forward rotation too. When built for forward rotation the roller is moved back a bit to better clear the shreds which are thrown directly at the roller. The direction of rotation can be changed in the field, which works because they don't use an idler pulley in the belt drive, which of course can't be on the load side of the belts.
I don't understand - what do you mean by lowering the mower all the way to the ground? Are you saying the blades should be touching the ground? We're talking grass and weeds here, with occasional current-season locust trees (which don't seem to die, no matter how many times you mow them). I'd think I want to keep the cutting height at 2 to 3 inches to keep the sod healthy. Much lower than that and it dies out during dry periods and then I have an erosion problem.
Terry