knucklehead
Platinum Member
I have followed with interest the various ideas others have had to adapt truck type plows to their tractors. My Father and brother had adapted an old 7.5' Western plow to replace the bucket on his 1976 L-series 2wd Kubota. We noticed the loader on my 79 Ford 1700 was exactly the same as the old Kubota, meaning the brackets on the adapter fit, so I bought it after he upgraded to a L3010.
The first Winter I used it, the plow seemed to throw the tractor around in deeper snow, probably because 7.5' is a lot of blade for the weight of the tractor. I had to "roll" deeper snow by pushing it up & over the bank using the loader lift until I worked an area wide enough, and angling was not always effective either. Since I bought an older truck with a hydraulic plow, I sort of parked the rig on a pallet for a couple years, until the old truck started having regular maintenance problems. Now I have a nice modern truck, no bucks for a "minute mount", and absolutely no desire to cram the older pump, reservoir, control valve, and heavy control cables into a 2002 Dodge, much less bolt the cumbersome in-cab controls under my smooth spiffy dashboard.
As it got colder, my pallet queen started to look prettier & prettier.
I thought it would be neat to have the versatility of both the plow and bucket, so I did some head scratching and decided to see if I could rig something up to mount the plow on the 3 pt hitch. Because I have had some other projects going on, I wanted to get this squared away quickly with minimal time and money. A few days ago, I had some extra time so I went down and hauled the old rig up next to the garage, backed the tractor up to it, and started to use the old vernier eyelashes on things.
I knew I wanted some sort of A frame to allow the plow to be pinned to the draft arms and the top link. My biggest problem was the time and equipment involved in cutting, drilling, bending and welding a big enough hunk of steel, and for that matter the time it would take to run after stock and draft pins and so forth. Then I had one of those "light bulb" moments. Of course, since the best designs are simple, I had been looking to steal ideas from my other attachments, including my bush hog. That's when the bulb flashed on....why not just take the stuff I needed from the bush hog?
A little grunting and groaning with a wrench, scrounging up a piece of old chain, and fiddling with the chain hookup, and I am ready to chase a few flakes around. I noticed right off that it would be hard to angle the blade with the chain where it was, so I re-rigged it back a bit, which also took the strain off the blade/sector itself so it was easier to manually angle.
What do you think?
Western Plow
Closer look at adapter
Rigged with robbed bush hog parts
Chain relocated
The first Winter I used it, the plow seemed to throw the tractor around in deeper snow, probably because 7.5' is a lot of blade for the weight of the tractor. I had to "roll" deeper snow by pushing it up & over the bank using the loader lift until I worked an area wide enough, and angling was not always effective either. Since I bought an older truck with a hydraulic plow, I sort of parked the rig on a pallet for a couple years, until the old truck started having regular maintenance problems. Now I have a nice modern truck, no bucks for a "minute mount", and absolutely no desire to cram the older pump, reservoir, control valve, and heavy control cables into a 2002 Dodge, much less bolt the cumbersome in-cab controls under my smooth spiffy dashboard.
As it got colder, my pallet queen started to look prettier & prettier.
I thought it would be neat to have the versatility of both the plow and bucket, so I did some head scratching and decided to see if I could rig something up to mount the plow on the 3 pt hitch. Because I have had some other projects going on, I wanted to get this squared away quickly with minimal time and money. A few days ago, I had some extra time so I went down and hauled the old rig up next to the garage, backed the tractor up to it, and started to use the old vernier eyelashes on things.
I knew I wanted some sort of A frame to allow the plow to be pinned to the draft arms and the top link. My biggest problem was the time and equipment involved in cutting, drilling, bending and welding a big enough hunk of steel, and for that matter the time it would take to run after stock and draft pins and so forth. Then I had one of those "light bulb" moments. Of course, since the best designs are simple, I had been looking to steal ideas from my other attachments, including my bush hog. That's when the bulb flashed on....why not just take the stuff I needed from the bush hog?
A little grunting and groaning with a wrench, scrounging up a piece of old chain, and fiddling with the chain hookup, and I am ready to chase a few flakes around. I noticed right off that it would be hard to angle the blade with the chain where it was, so I re-rigged it back a bit, which also took the strain off the blade/sector itself so it was easier to manually angle.
What do you think?
Western Plow
Closer look at adapter
Rigged with robbed bush hog parts
Chain relocated