Rather strange, to me, seeing manure spreading on the snow! We usually do it either before or after the snow. With before the snow being the best option. Gives enough time for the biology to do it's thing under the snow cover. ;-) Thanks for sharing.
It does much much more than a half decent job and that spreader is probably 1962 or older; show me a manure spreader built in the last twenty years that will hold up that long. nice TO20 too
I find that not loading the back works best spreading. Wont glob start like that. And it wont take any longer cleaning out the gold. But better spreading job.
It leaves a lot at the beginning when you start because the tines are full of manure. Just don't fill it up to where the manure touches the tines. It's not a good idea to fill it like that when it's below freezing. If the manure was frozen it could pop a shear pin.
Knock the floor out of gear and spin the beaters first and it won't leave such a pile, stop the beaters then engage the floor and start spreading. Any pto spreader will do it that bad with the floor engaged.
Done that but never with a TO. We just brought one home yesterday and these videos got me even more excited to play with it. Great stuff.
Rather strange, to me, seeing manure spreading on the snow! We usually do it either before or after the snow. With before the snow being the best option. Gives enough time for the biology to do it's thing under the snow cover. ;-)
Thanks for sharing.
I've seen some like that around that still work old but still good.
Yea, it does a half decent job too. Thanks for watching!!
It does much much more than a half decent job and that spreader is probably 1962 or older; show me a manure spreader built in the last twenty years that will hold up that long. nice TO20 too
I find that not loading the back works best spreading. Wont glob start like that. And it wont take any longer cleaning out the gold. But better spreading job.
Hows the to doin now?
Good day Those spreaders were made frozen manure or ground. Those heavy beaters would hit break it apart. Thanks good video
My uncle always called a manure spreader a Turd Hearse... My buddy calls it a Turd Tosser...lol
+jkrieg31 lol
That is a transmission pto not a live one. good video and nice to 20.
It leaves a lot at the beginning when you start because the tines are full of manure. Just don't fill it up to where the manure touches the tines. It's not a good idea to fill it like that when it's below freezing. If the manure was frozen it could pop a shear pin.
exactly
Knock the floor out of gear and spin the beaters first and it won't leave such a pile, stop the beaters then engage the floor and start spreading. Any pto spreader will do it that bad with the floor engaged.
That is the only machine made you are supposed work the sh*t out of.
Ha Ha
It takes a beating, that's for sure.. very reliable. Thanks for the comment!
that looks like a straw spreader