Frontier BB4284 box blade with hydraulic rippers.
The tractor will probably end up 7' wide, so this should be the perfect width.
Frontier RB2308 back blade with hydraulics.
AKfish, you are right that I can take care of the infrequent snow with my front bucket fairly easily. When it comes to maintaining my dirt roads and trails on the farm, and finish contouring land after softening it up with the rippers in the box blade, I thought the RB2308 would be great. Also the RB2308 could be used for creating and maintaining swales, although there might be a better tool for this. Any additional thoughts on this would be appreciated. The dealer was actually steering me away from the land plane and advocating for the RB2308.
Frontier LP1208 land plane. Road and trail maintenance and contouring land. Again, like I said in my last post, I haven't had that much experience with back blades and have not used a land plane.
Any additional elaboration on back blade vs land plane, or in addition to, would be greatly appreciated.
Frontier RT1270 tiller like AKfish has, or the dealer recommended the RT2283 because it would better match the track of the machine. Again, I don't have any experience with tillers this big so any specific advice would be great.
Frontier WC1208 8" capacity pto driven, hydraulic self feed,
chipper. This is in the 11k range, the only justification for this is that it actually takes a lot of time to burn up all of the material that my farm generates each year, and after all of that work there are no chips to use. After reading AKfish's comment, I am worried about how it might work my tractor, and also that a dedicated machine might be better in other ways. From what I have seen, for somewhere between 10k and 15k, I could get a clean used dedicated Bandit or Vermeer.
Any more thoughts about chipping?
Thank you all for generously sharing your experience.
Island Farmer