kludge
New member
I have had my PT-425 for 7 weeks now and throughly love it. 32 hours and counting. I actually spent more money in attachments than on the tractor, and would recommend to anyone that they buy as many of them as they need and can afford. The true strength of this tractor is its versatility and maneuverability.
One of the attachments that I did get is the plugger/core aerator and I have been curious as to its construction. This is the only attachment that if I had it to do over again I would probably make my own or have PT make a modified one.
The aerator consists of 11 independent hubs with 6 tines per hub. Each of the 11 hubs can free turn on the axial shaft. Each of the 11 hubs has its own grease fitting.
When operating the aerator the free turning hubs make it hard to have an even downward pressure on the aerator. Approximately one third of the time the tines all line up and you are attempting to plug all 11 at once. One third of the time they randomize and it plugs smoothly instead of jumping up and down. The remaining third of the time it is somewhere in between. So as you operate the aerator, it will bounce sometimes, wobble side to side sometimes, and smoothly plug sometimes.
I am considering spot welding the hubs together in an offset pattern to attempt to have it plug more smoothly. What I don't fully understand is why it is constructed this way in the first place. Is it to randomize the plug pattern. (I really don't think the grass cares) Or is it just cheaper and easier to make independent hubs. (Seems to me it costs more) Does anyone have any thoughts?
One of the attachments that I did get is the plugger/core aerator and I have been curious as to its construction. This is the only attachment that if I had it to do over again I would probably make my own or have PT make a modified one.
The aerator consists of 11 independent hubs with 6 tines per hub. Each of the 11 hubs can free turn on the axial shaft. Each of the 11 hubs has its own grease fitting.
When operating the aerator the free turning hubs make it hard to have an even downward pressure on the aerator. Approximately one third of the time the tines all line up and you are attempting to plug all 11 at once. One third of the time they randomize and it plugs smoothly instead of jumping up and down. The remaining third of the time it is somewhere in between. So as you operate the aerator, it will bounce sometimes, wobble side to side sometimes, and smoothly plug sometimes.
I am considering spot welding the hubs together in an offset pattern to attempt to have it plug more smoothly. What I don't fully understand is why it is constructed this way in the first place. Is it to randomize the plug pattern. (I really don't think the grass cares) Or is it just cheaper and easier to make independent hubs. (Seems to me it costs more) Does anyone have any thoughts?