Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter?

   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #11  
I've used all of the above, but the thing that usually works last on ANYTHING rusted stuck is when I get frustrated enough to quit for a while & soak the hell out of it with PB Blaster as a "parting gift". a few days of repeating that then any of the above usually goes much easier than day 1 attempt.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #12  
There's most likely a splined/keyed bar behind the disk and blades. Pull the blades off first then the disk should come off. The bar may need a puller to get off.
Apparently the Land Pride stump jumper disc is welded to the crossbar.
This diagram is from messicks.com
Screenshot 2025-04-23 at 20-19-09 Land Pride RCF2072 Parts Diagrams.png
 
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   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #13  
Harbor Fright makes a dandy hydraulic 2 or 3 jaw puller. I have one and it works fine on frozen on brake rotors so it should work on that stump jumper as well. I can remove any stuck on brake rotor with about 4 pumps and it it don't pull the rotor, it breaks it in 2 for easy removal. I have the 10 ton model btw. Best heavy duty puller I've ever used.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter?
  • Thread Starter
#14  
I was under the impression that the blades were mounted to the stump jumper, not arms underneath. Will work on pulling them off on my next shot at it.

Colorado weather slowed down my efforts a bit. Got to love a weather forecast of high of 76 with 2.5" of snow. Even worse when the weatherman is right. Then I'm traveling this weekend.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #15  
I've got a LandPride 1860 rotary cutter with a leaky output shaft seal, possibly other gearbox issues. I got the castle nut off the bottom, but am not able to get the stump jumper off the gearbox. Crowbars, 7' tamping bar, propane torch heating up the outside of the splines, no luck. I can't get a great place to pry as the deck & pan on the stump jumper flex a lot. But I heated things up & was prying as best I could. Beat on theings with a hammer & some rebar as a drift. Flipped it right side up & pounded on the top of the stump jumper througth the big hole for accessing the bolts holding the blades to the stump jumper.

Any suggestions? Get a better torch than my little yellow bottle MAPP gas torch? Porta power that may get under the stump jumper to try & pry closer to the center of the stump jumper?
Sounds like you’ve thrown everything but the kitchen sink at it. At this point, I’d seriously consider stepping up your heat—those little yellow MAPP bottles just don’t put out enough for something like this. If you can get your hands on an oxy-acetylene or oxy-propane torch, heat the hub around the splines only and try to get it red-hot (but not the shaft). That expansion might be just enough to break the bond.

Also, if you have access to a porta power or even a bottle jack, try setting up a centered push from underneath—like through the blade bolt access hole—so you're not prying against the flexy parts of the stump jumper. Some guys also fab up a puller that bolts through the blade holes and pulls down evenly.

Worst case, you may have to cut the hub off, but I’d try heat + pressure before going there. Good luck, that’s a nasty job.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter?
  • Thread Starter
#16  
New 3/4" drive socket from HF & an 8' pipe got the blades off.

Sketchy levels of force making the stump jumper look like a pringles chip was not successful on the stump jumper. No heat, gonna try & scrounge up a oxy acetylene torch for my next run.

I'm still not certain if the blade carrier is attached to the stump jumper. Taco levels of force seems to indicate it's welded together. Or at least the stump jumper is rusted & seized onto the blade carrier with the same levels of crud the blade carrier is attached to the shaft. The stump jumper didn't flex where that 1" thick bar stock or whatever makes the blade carrier was, only 90 degrees off.
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   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #17  
Oh my what a project!

Its going to be interesting to find out how its attached.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #18  
I've removed them a few times. I just put a pipe through the access hole to remove the blade bolts and beat the pipe with a T Post pounder. Hit it a couple times, spin it to the other side, hit it a few times, and spin it to the other side and hit it a few times. Eventually, it always falls off.
 
   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #19  
I built this puller to get a stump jumper off that had been on for 30 years. Used a 20 ton jack to break it loose and the 2 ton in the picture to finish. I drilled 4 holes through the pan to allow the all threads to connect to bars behind the rotor bar.
 

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   / Pulling a stump jumper off a Land Pride rotary cutter? #20  
I've pulled stump jumpers successfully by using a pair of wedges between the underside of the deck and the outer lip of the SJ at 12:00, 3:00, 6:00, and 9:00 position.

First, measure the deck-to-rim gap around your stump jumper (usually around 2"). Layout and saw/sand 4 pair of wedges cut from hardwood so you can initially install. They'll need to expand beyond your gap thickness. I put a small notch on the 4 SJ side wedges so they engage the SJ rim and stay put as I tap on its mate.

Orient the 4 pair of wedges evenly around the SJ. The deck side wedges are the ones you will tap on driving inward. The 4 SJ wedges stay put because they are held by their notches.

Screw the castle nut on a few threads because the SJs often release violently. As mentioned, penetrating oil or heat can also help. Start tapping the deck side wedges in evenly. An occasional wack on the castle nut will also help it pop. She's usually off in 5 minutes... keep the wedges for the next time!
 

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