Rotary Cutter Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008

   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #31  

Wow, those were really bent up! LD1's blades look like they are still in good condition, with the cutting edges hanging level.
LD1, how much rake do you usually have? With your experience I'm assuming you've experienced with the amount of rake already.
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #32  

Those actually look like what they call "uplift"

Looks like behind where it is sharpened, the blade gives a little upward curve. But pic could be deceiving.

And for that cutter, I think the "flat" blades are actually double edge. I am looking at getting bushhog part number 86666. Seems I can find them for ~35 a blade. And woods wants $140/pair. Dimensions are the same nearest I can tell. Mine measure 20-1/4" long, 17-3/4" from hole center to tip, 1.5" hole, and 2" offset. Only difference I see is my woods blades are either 3/8 or 7/16" thick and the bushhog are 1/2".
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #33  
Wow, those were really bent up! LD1's blades look like they are still in good condition, with the cutting edges hanging level.
LD1, how much rake do you usually have? With your experience I'm assuming you've experienced with the amount of rake already.

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
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #34  
IMG_20190614_082308982.jpg
IMG_20190614_082256946.jpg

This is the before and after difference of how much the weeds will be laid over.

That is my usual mow height. 6.75" and 8.5" in back
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #35  
I'm interested in your results LD1. That looks like it should do the trick! I've got a DS96 too and in tall stem johnson grass it doesn't do very well. I have to double cut some places. I took this video just after sharpening my blades. The weeds are taller than the deck is long and so the stems don't have a chance to come back up. This clip is fast forwarded to a spot that shows I had to do a triple cut. I don't cut for the public, but it's still annoying to have to go over an area twice.

Farmtrac Bush hogging - YouTube

My dad has an 8' Landpride and it does about the same in the tall stuff. My brother and I have a 15' Woods and it does much better in this stuff. But the deck is much deeper and longer on the 15'.
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #36  
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
Hey, you really got right on it! Good pics. Good job.

Its going to work. Youve touched on about every pertinent parameter here. The part I bolded causes a varying effect as you know, since the front is flat/straight, and not instead contoured to approximate the blade arc. - - I have no experience with multispindle. My only long term experience is with an old 5' JD which is contoured with 3 angles and therefore presents more equal layover across the cut path. Blade setback from the front edge is only 1" in the middle and doesnt increase a lot until out near full cut width.
- - With your front skirt essentially removed that varying effect might fall into the noise and be undetectable even with the straight across front.

Ill be interested in hearing how it works out, and also whether front ricochets become any problem
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #37  
That's good stuff LD1. I agree it should make a substantial improvement.
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #38  
My BH 3008 is about 10 years old and probably 350-400 hours on it. I touched up my blades with a grinder about 100 hours ago. It's cuts just fine. This is tall Bahia grass, running in Range II 2nd gear.

The rear of the deck is set about 3" higher than the front.

IMG_0687.jpg

IMG_0689.jpg

IMG_0693.jpg

It cuts the same forward or reverse.
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #39  
For comparison here is Bahia in our 9 acre "yard", not quite as tall as the above pasture, cut with my 84" rear finish mower.

IMG_0678.jpg

IMG_0674.jpg

IMG_0673.jpg

IMG_0679.jpg
 
   / Problems with my new Bush Hog 3008 #40  
 

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