BJN644 said:
I would like to learn more about this.
I would think dragging with the bucket bottom would wear out a bucket quickly.
But I'm fairly new so please tell me more.
Ok-- think of this as if the hydralic cylinders are your knees..
If you put enough back pressure on it, they will buckle..
the force you put on the cylinders when back dragging is multiplied by the speed you are dragging, and material you back drag and the amount of angle you are the bucket tilted to..
consider this..
If you have the bucket at full dump, and you are backdragging.
then you hit a large rock or hard clay etc, the entire force of the "catch" is transfered to the weakest part. In this case it is the cylinders..
so that means the cylinders may bend. (someone here had pics of a bent set).
Personnally, I think if you are back dragging so much that you wear the heal of a bucket out, then you've earned a new bucket.
I do alot of back dragging, and of the 104 hours on my tractor, I would say 1/3 is back dragging, and I don't see anything but paint and some gauging...
so it would take alot of work to wear that bucket out!
Later,
Jim