Bombero
New member
Well, actually it is just another boxblade! Here in the Philippines the beast of burden is the carabao, or water buffalo, so if you combine the strength of the carabao and the power of the Kubota into a boxblade….just use your imagination.
We fabricated this with about $80 in steel, a welder, cutting torch, hand grinder and the SAE manual. The blade was formed by hand with a heavy hammer for 500 pesos, about $10. Shortly after taking this picture we put the boxblade to work. I learned a lot about setting the pitch and staying away from large surface roots. I twisted one of the scarifiers into a pretzel. I reluctantly reinforced all the scarifiers with a diagonal strut even though I tempered the steel. With the power of the B7500HST I am not sure where the weak point needs to be on an implement like this.
This was a fun project and it works better than I expected. The next project is already on the drawing board.
We fabricated this with about $80 in steel, a welder, cutting torch, hand grinder and the SAE manual. The blade was formed by hand with a heavy hammer for 500 pesos, about $10. Shortly after taking this picture we put the boxblade to work. I learned a lot about setting the pitch and staying away from large surface roots. I twisted one of the scarifiers into a pretzel. I reluctantly reinforced all the scarifiers with a diagonal strut even though I tempered the steel. With the power of the B7500HST I am not sure where the weak point needs to be on an implement like this.
This was a fun project and it works better than I expected. The next project is already on the drawing board.