EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
the dozer and it had hinged scarifiers mounted on the back of the blade. So he'd lower the blade and back up with scarifiers tearing up the ground. Then when he'd go forward the back side of those scarifiers would just drag along behind the blade. It was just absolutely amazing how much work those guys could get done in a short time.
I've heard about this and thought about adding them to my blade, but I was almost done with my pond at the time and didn't feel like taking the time to do this when I figured I'd be done digging by the time I got it all figured out and built.
I ran a JD 450G for a little while and realized that it was too light to dig into hard dirt, or push anything on the ground. It was great for spreading piles and shaping. In fact, I've often thought of downsizing to a smaller dozer because it was so much easier to manuver and shape dirt piles.
It takes weight and HP to dig in the dirt with a dozer. If you are too light or underpowered, you will spin your tracks and waste a lot of time. For digging my pond bigger or a straight blade would have been better. But like in everything related to tractors, money and what you can get the job done with is what matters more then what is the very best tool for the job.
Eddie