Should I buy this Woods rototiller

   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #1  

LabLuvR

Gold Member
Joined
Feb 12, 2004
Messages
255
Location
SC
Tractor
Kubota MX5400
Recently I had about made up my mind to buy a 6' King Kutter rototiller for my potential food plot business. However, my neighbor who just bought a Woods 5' rototiller, has decided to sell his because he found a used 6 footer.

The King Kutter I was looking at would run me about $1800. The guy wants $1000 for the 5' Woods which has at the most about 5 hours on it. The money side of me says buy the woods because the savings of $800 could be applied toward a trailer I need. I'm just not familiar with Woods rototillers and am wondering if I would be happy with a 5' instead of a 6' behind my Kubota L3710. Thanks for any opinions!
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #2  
LabLuvR:

I have a woods BB and Woods rotary cutter. I think it is well made but I bet it is made in Italy. If you found a 6 footer it would be a deal
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #3  
Do your research to make sure that the gearbox is rated at your PTO horsepower or higher. Also, does the 5 footer cover the width of your rear tires? If not, can you offset it? I would prefer not to have to offset it. Check the model to make sure it is a medium duty. Check the KK you are pricing to see if it is a medium duty. If it is the same or higher quality than the KK, you better hurry up and buy it! Check the weights online if possible also.
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #4  
I don't know what tractor you have, but I would jump on it. It's what I have, run it on a L3130
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #5  
At a price of $1000 with only 5 hours on it, I'd assume the tiller your neighbor is selling is the Woods GTC60-2. It's a lighter-duty chain drive. It sells for $1600 brand new.

The KK is gear driven, which some consider more "bulletproof".

I'm getting the GTC60-2. I wanted the narrower 5-foot for tilling beds. My salesman assured me the chain drive is strong. I tend to believe him since he'll be there to back it up if I break it.
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #6  
Since I never bought a plow this year, I rented the woods tiller off my dealer. It is a five foot woods, and I didn't have one problem with it today. I did my garden and my neighbors garden. If I had one negative thing to say, it is that it doesn't go deep enough. Not that I needed it to go 4" deeper, just that after I broke the virgin ground and spun it all up (while it was wet I might add) it wasn't as deep as would have preferred it to be.

We had at least a 1/4" of rainfall last night/yesterday, and the ground is soaked. I had already picked it up, and since I was renting it for "free", it had to be put to use before Sunday night. I would say I tilled about an acre or so with it. On my land I managed to find some decent sized rocks, and it had no problem dealing with them. My neighbor had a garden in his spot a couple of years ago, so it was pretty much rock free.

After using it today, I am now contemplating buy a 6 - 7' tiller, instead of a plow. The five foot tiller doesn't cover my rear wheels, and it can't be offset. I had to be creative in tilling the areas up.

Keep in mind this tiller is well used, and is a rental. i would think one with five hours on it, as long as it was greased and had gear oil in it, was a decent deal.
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #7  
I have a 6 foot Woods rototiller and a L4330 Kuboto tractor with industrial tires. The Tiller covers the tire tracks and after leveling the tiller it tills much deeper. I bought this tiller new 9 years ago and it just developed an oil seal leak on the left side. Need to check for seal leaks on any tiller you buy. I really like this tiller and will be replaceing the oil seal as soon as I figure out how to do it. Any one out there have any advise on doing this?
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #8  
The King Kutter I was looking at would run me about $1800. The guy wants $1000 for the 5' Woods which has at the most about 5 hours on it. The money side of me says buy the woods because the savings of $800 could be applied toward a trailer I need. I'm just not familiar with Woods rototillers and am wondering if I would be happy with a 5' instead of a 6' behind my Kubota L3710. Thanks for any opinions!

Probably not a bad deal for the Woods. I just sold a 5' KK tiller (gear drive) for $1200 with similar hours (or less) than that Woods you mention.
 
   / Should I buy this Woods rototiller #9  
Since this topic has resurrected I'm curious what LabLuvR did...I would have got the Woods.

Of course we garden, I dunno, maybe a full acre at most and the small offset tiller is more than enough...and I also want a trailer, a good to excellent trailer. Not to be snobby but I'm not too keen on those TSC trailers.
 
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2008 Toyota Camry LE Sedan (A44572)
2008 Toyota Camry...
2017 Jaguar XE 25T Sedan (A44572)
2017 Jaguar XE 25T...
2017 Chevrolet Tahoe SUV (A44572)
2017 Chevrolet...
20ft Shipping Container/ Tiny Home (A44391)
20ft Shipping...
Volvo SD-100D Single Drum Vibratory Dirt Compactor (A44571)
Volvo SD-100D...
2008 Chevrolet 3500 HD (A46877)
2008 Chevrolet...
 
Top