Roysallis -
What you say about the hinged blade being used to meter out a small amount of soil, sand or whatever makes perfect sense to me
provided the soil is loose enough, as stated by Richard (Cowboydoc).
Bill -
<font color=blue>I was not sure I had that feature until I raised the unit and looked under there.</font color=blue>
Now you got me wondering -- maybe I haven't looked close enough. Since I obviously don't know my box blade very well yet, I thought it was too soon to go peeking under its skirts. /w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif Unfortunately, it will be two weeks before I get back to the property so's I can check. /w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif
Richard -
You speak many words of wisdom on the subject. Thanks!
<font color=blue>You have to constantly be using the three point to raise and lower a little bit</font color=blue>
This brings us back to the ol' position control discussion. On my
L2500 I find that I can
lower the blade with reasonable precision, but
raising it is a whole different matter. On a low-to-high scale of 1 to 8, nothing happens at all until I'm nearly up to 8, and even then it's herky-jerky. /w3tcompact/icons/mad.gif
John -
Since
that box blade costs half again as much as my tractor, it should damn well drag
itself! /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif
GlueGuy -
My condolences on the passing of your dad. My own dad died about the same time as your mom. My mother, among other things, is suffering from severe dementia. She doesn't really know who I am any more and can rarely complete an entire sentence (she used to teach 3 languages). To me, the woman I knew as my mother has been gone for several years now. I'm guessing some folks out there know what I mean. But as you say, we'll see just how "ready" I am when the time comes...