I usually set the rear ~2" higher than the front.
But it varies. Some jobs I cut higher, some lower. And unless I make an extreme height difference, I usually dont mess with the tailwheels. So bumping the cut height up and down changes the front more than the back, so the pitch changes. I'd say a good average is 5"-6" front and 7"-8" rear.
But I experiment on the fly. Hydraulic toplink, I can change the pitch on the fly and just not let the tailwheels touch. I can rake the back up to 12"+ while leaving the frotn down at 5" inches. Makes no difference. Stemmy stuff still stands up. Dense patches of thistle that are 5' tall, stands of goldenrod, etc. Just cut like crap regardless of speed or pitch. And I run my blades sharp too.
Thats why I am hoping this works. With the cutter more "open" on the front, I am hoping it will lessen then angle of the weed as the front tries to lay it down. Hoping that buys enough time for it to actually get cut, rather than laying down under the blades.
Dont know the exacts, I can measure this afternoon, but there is only about 6" between the blades and the deck bottom.
And that piece I cut off, was 3". And it was a few inches forward of the blades even, when the blades were at their closest to the front of the deck.
SO basically having a piece of metal.....in FRONT of the cutting path.....laying weeds down. And that piece of metal was only 3" above the cutting height of the blade.
Now I have 6" of so