Tiller

   / Tiller #1  

billsh96

Member
Joined
May 17, 2009
Messages
40
Location
Northern Michigan
Tractor
2008 BX 1860
Tried out the new tiller today. KK 48" XB, on my BX 1860. I was very pleased with way the 1860 powered the unit. All was going great until I caught a softball sized rock that stopped me dead in my tracks. Killed the engine. I guess I need to find that thread called "Slip Clutch adjustment for dummies!" Other than a dent in the top of the tiller tunnel, it looks ok. Restarted and ran fine.
Bill
 
   / Tiller #2  
lol i found alot of odd things with mine tilling up some guys gardens up near my farm i have the tg 84 pretty nice machine and i found a 12 foot ground rod several brick piles and a couple rotten stumps.
 
   / Tiller #3  
Sometimes leaving the back flap up lets rocks go out rather than back into the tines.:D:D
 
   / Tiller #4  
Sometimes leaving the back flap up lets rocks go out rather than back into the tines.:D:D
Sometimes than can help, but there is nothing better than properly adjusting the slip clutch to prevent driveline damage.

EDIT: or should I say................a properly 'slipped' slip clutch, then adjusted according to specs.
 
   / Tiller #5  
I set out to service my KKII yesterday before tilling a patch that the Plant Manager wants for peas. Noticed that one of the friction discs was only half there. Removed it and the intact one, popped them in a baggy and lit out for TSC, where I bought the tiller. Spent 15 minutes explaining to a clerk, then the manager what the part was - even showed them where on the PTO of one of their tillers it's located. The store was super busy. I got the feeling I was wasting their time. Nothing but blank stares. They sent me to a place down the road that sells chain saws & lawn mowers - they didn't even sell 3pt equipment. Stopped at 2 tractor dealers - no luck. Got home and placed my order with ASC on-line. Also ordered a spare set so I won't get stuck like this again. The waiting is the hardest part ...

Moral of the story ... get a set of spare friction discs when you don't need them so you have them handy when you do.

-Jim
 
   / Tiller #6  
I set out to service my KKII yesterday before tilling a patch that the Plant Manager wants for peas. Noticed that one of the friction discs was only half there. Removed it and the intact one, popped them in a baggy and lit out for TSC, where I bought the tiller. Spent 15 minutes explaining to a clerk, then the manager what the part was - even showed them where on the PTO of one of their tillers it's located. The store was super busy. I got the feeling I was wasting their time. Nothing but blank stares. They sent me to a place down the road that sells chain saws & lawn mowers - they didn't even sell 3pt equipment. Stopped at 2 tractor dealers - no luck. Got home and placed my order with ASC on-line. Also ordered a spare set so I won't get stuck like this again. The waiting is the hardest part ...

Moral of the story ... get a set of spare friction discs when you don't need them so you have them handy when you do.

-Jim

Or shear pins!;)
 
 

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