IndyIan
Veteran Member
Are you going to use the backhoe mostly then? Digging stumps, bushes? I've mowed a few hills where I couldn't go across them, and I kept the rear end downhill the whole time. That is with fresh sharp R1 tires on grippy grass, so it didn't slip. I guess I can see using a box blade on those slopes, but it would be all pushing downhill, and if the soil was too damp, it would be too slick to do safely. Keeping the back end down, saves you from bumping the 4wd off or forgetting and going for a ride straight down.
Depending on your slope, the roughness, gritty or clay soil, and what you want to, it maybe quite tricky to work there with your tractor? It's not the ideal place to learn anyways! Start at the bottom for a trial run and see what you think, ideally you try to run the backhoe with the tractor level, but some amount of slope will be fine, just not too much! You don't want to be able to flip the tractor over the outrigger just with a mistake on the hoe controls... As you will make lots of mistakes.
A small dozer will flatten out a slope much easier and safer,
Depending on your slope, the roughness, gritty or clay soil, and what you want to, it maybe quite tricky to work there with your tractor? It's not the ideal place to learn anyways! Start at the bottom for a trial run and see what you think, ideally you try to run the backhoe with the tractor level, but some amount of slope will be fine, just not too much! You don't want to be able to flip the tractor over the outrigger just with a mistake on the hoe controls... As you will make lots of mistakes.
A small dozer will flatten out a slope much easier and safer,