Hi Jeff,
I have never bought a PT plow. I have made 3 just by buying used truck plows when I see them very cheap(<$100 because I do not need one with the frame and lift cylinder) and weld a PT adapter plate to them. I did splurge on the V-Plow (paid $350 because I really wanted one) about 5 years ago and finally added the extra hydraulic circuits to the tractor and welded on the adapter plate a couple of years ago. I have been EXTREMELY happy with that setup. I bought the plow to cut down on the time it took me to plow the neighbors driveways but what surprised me is how useful it is to me to use it in the reverse V-plow snow pusher mode at my house. Now I can select where I want to dump the snow instead of having a continuous pile of snow alongside the driveway.
Ken
Hey Ken, Thanks for all of the suggestions and info here. I did a quote on each part (don't know if it is older timers kicking in, or just forget what I was typing about) :laughing: I am not sure which snow blade the guy has with this unit I am looking at, as he didn't have a picture of it. Seems people in my area seem to want top dollar on anything. I see stuff that will be on Craiglists for 2 years, and it is sitting there rotting away, rather then taking some money for it, and letting someone use it. Places to find scrape steel are getting harder to find also, and all the steel places want you to buy a full stick of most anything.
Another thing that has me kind of worried, or concerned is it has a brush cutter and rototiller and says both are 48". I wouldn't think that they would make such for a 1430, and in the attachments for it they are not listed, guess I should call Terry and ask him if such were ever made. To me the wheels would be a lot wider then what the implement would be.
But that does remind me of one potential issue of the PT for you. The hydraulic disconnects can be a little hard to hook up. Releasing pressure before you ever remove the implement helps. I used to use a bungee cord to keep the lever pulled when I was doing hookup but there were still a few times where I had to use wrenches to loosen the fitting to release pressure before I hooked up. I switched to flat face connectors and also added additional hydraulic circuits to my tractor. That means when connecting a hydraulic attachment, I do not have to undo the quick attach plate latching lines to use them for the implement - they are now hard plumbed permanently to those connections. That set up also allows me to use the existing joystick from the front of the tractor to manipulate the valves as necessary such that I can attach the flat face connector with only one hand on the connector. Without doing that, it can be quite hard to hook up with even two hands on the connector. I have been extremely pleased with that modification.
Ken
I know all about the problems with trying to connect hydros many times. Seems my feet are too long in the chair sticking out to get to them most the time. I have replaced all of them on my JD, and that helped some, and all the hoses, so I won't have the problem in the middle of something with it dumping fluids all over the places. It is pretty good as long as I shut it off, and move the levers and hold all of them for a minute to dump all the fluid pressure down, and would think the PT would be the same way. Does it use double "O" ring connectors on the females?
The PT does not have a lot of leg /foot room. It is nothing like the mower you showed. It will be much harder to get in and out off. But that is also true of the JD CUT's from the 80's - 90's (not sure about now). The clean pass through was one reason I preferred the Ford/New Holland tractors. The PT might be easier to get into if the seat mount pivoted to get in and out but with a pin lock to keep it in place while using the tractor. You could even make it with some serious ball bearing slides to let it come out from the tractor more. Warning that you have to keep everything compact height wise because the FOPS does not give lots of head room either. That is why I used a much more expensive extra low height suspension setup for my seat modification. You could mount a swivel plate to the PT and then mount the HD bearing slides to angle brackets on the swivel plate and on the seat. This would put them to the outside of the seat thus not raising the height. I have even seen triple extension slides that were rated for 500 lbs which would extend the seat out about 2' or more. You would need to be able to pin it in the extended position as well so that you could slide yourself on with out it retracting on you.
Ken
That is kind of something I have already been thinking about. I love the seat on the Hustler mower you saw in the pictures. I have a skinny butt and it helps me out there some. On the JD, that is a seat that I bought and totally made the brackets and all up for it. I added springs to the back of it on either side, so has a pretty good ride. Put it on in the beginning and didn't realize the pan on it had about a 10-15 degree tilt on it, then the pans on the back of the tractor are tilted forward also. Think the seat is for one of their better Zero Turn mowers, and I do need, or want the arms as it helps me out a lot. I also thought about making new mounts and all up to where it mounts to the PT, and make them as low as possible. How much play do they have up and down above the hydro tank? Have to keep that in mind with trying to make it lower. Might end up making one of the PVC style things you saw that I use to get on them, as they are light and easy to move, only bad thing is if I have problems out in the field, I have to find someone to go get that, and my chair, in order for me to get off.
Jeff