tiller

   / tiller #11  
I agree cutting is easy to do, the problem is....what about if I mess-up the measuring? That's what I'm not comfortable doing, if I mess up the measuring....I'll mess-up the cutting as well.

If you have a quick hitch, you may not even need to cut it due to the extra length required for the drive shaft. The one for my stump grinder worked right out of the box.
The neighbor that bought a new small tractor and 5 foot tiller had me measure and cut the pto shaft. It is easy for an ex machinist to figure out. He then bought a quick hitch that would have negated the need to cut the shaft in the first place.
 
   / tiller
  • Thread Starter
#12  
I agree cutting is easy to do, the problem is....what about if I mess-up the measuring? That's what I'm not comfortable doing, if I mess up the measuring....I'll mess-up the cutting as well.

Hook up your tiller have the pto shaft in 2 pieces attach to
tractor pto hold together on my unit when I did this I had
a 9 inch over lap and a 5 inch space before it was completly compressed together so I know they would not come apart when operating our tiller and also space to back and forth
movement so not to damage gear box
You can check out youtube as they have videos of how to

willy
Thank you.
 
   / tiller
  • Thread Starter
#13  
The neighbor that bought a new small tractor and 5 foot tiller had me measure and cut the pto shaft. It is easy for an ex machinist to figure out. He then bought a quick hitch that would have negated the need to cut the shaft in the first place.
I don't think I want buy a quick Hitch... that would only add extra weight on the 3 point, maybe if I had a full size tractor with more power.
 
   / tiller #14  
I don't think I want buy a quick Hitch... that would only add extra weight on the 3 point, maybe if I had a full size tractor with more power.
Yes, a quick hitch adds weight and moves the tiller further rearward. Me, I would use it with the 2" cut off. Most times, tractors with full size cat 1 3pt arms can use attachments without cutting the pto shaft. Most times the inner and outer tubes of the shaft are about the same length so if you need it 2" shorter, you have to cut each tube by 2". The hard part is figuring out how the pto shaft safety cover comes off. Once off, it is easy to see the shafts and what is needed.
 
   / tiller #15  
I thought PTO shafts were available in various lengths. I bought a shaft that fit when I bought my tiller. How much does the QA add to the length?
 
   / tiller #18  
My Wally BX42S was my first implement to need a PTO shaft. I didn't cut - I didn't measure - until I understood what the owners manual was trying to explain/describe. Once you get your head around it - it's not all that difficult.

I connect the implement up to the tractor 3-point. Pull the PTO shaft into two pieces. Connect one piece to the tractor - other to the implement. Hold them close together, but not reconnected - raise the implement fully - lower it completely.

You will see if the shaft ends will bottom out. Point being - each half shaft is the same length. Either the shafts WILL bottom out - or they will NOT bottom out. If they will bottom out - measure how much needs to be cut off BOTH shafts. Add one inch to the amount cut off each shaft. Also - similar amount cut off the shields. De-burr all cut surfaces - lubricate.
 
   / tiller #19  
 

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