Do it! You wont regret not getting stung by yellow jackets, wasps, hornets when you find their nests! just watch the branches and take your time and no glass will be shattered.
Nice job, I’m looking at getting a kioti with a cab, I have 22ac and want to clean paths through the woods and grow veggies/fruit. Maybe you can do a review about the tractor.
Nice job. I have just had my EX5810 delivered and am looking forward to clearing some of my 100 acres. It's a beast of a thing, I think it might be too big for me! Next to find some implements for it! Is your brush hog kioti branded?
45hp. Its the NX4510. As with most things we always want more power, but this was a on sale model sitting on the lot they were trying to move a few years back and I would rather have had the savings instead of 5-10 more hp at the time.
@@brettadams417 Backing up over shrubs or stumps can cause the blade to deflect so bad it literaly leaves a ring in the deck of the bush hog. If you ever see a perfectly round raised circle with chipped paint or rust on the top side of the deck thats exactly what happened which is why I drive forward and use the loader/grapple to push over the thick stuff, If I cant push it over I dont want to be using the bush hog to try and cut it.
@@hcr-motorworks this would happen the same going forward or backwards…zero difference. Has to do with what you go after not the direction. Going forward into an uncut area and then having to back up as you did in the vid means your exposing the underside of your tractor which is much more vulnerable and expensive then the rotary cutter. All rotary cutter’s eventually get wear and tear regardless of the direction…that’s literally why it’s a rotary cutter and not a lawn mower…it’s designed and purpose built for this. To help you out the better way is lift your cutter up a few feet back up about a cutter length and a half into the uncut then put cutter all the way down drive forward. Depending on how big the material is dictates how big to lift your cutter. If it’s not that big doesn’t need to be as high and can go longer distances backwards. This is how to properly do this activity.
For a guy who's contemplating buying a cabbed Kioti to work in the woods, this video was perfect. Thanks!
Do it! You wont regret not getting stung by yellow jackets, wasps, hornets when you find their nests! just watch the branches and take your time and no glass will be shattered.
Great video, i will be doing the same thing with my TYM 474 cab
I've been eyeing the TYM's myself! congrats on your tractor
Kioti tractors kick ass.
yes they do!
Nice job, I’m looking at getting a kioti with a cab, I have 22ac and want to clean paths through the woods and grow veggies/fruit. Maybe you can do a review about the tractor.
Hands down best value in the orange tractor world for sure.
I'll do a review and features video of it soon!
👍👊😎Nice Work !!🇺🇸🚜🍺
Thanks! I've watched a few of your videos as well!
Nice job
I’m guessing the tractor is 45 hp?
Yep 45hp and 37ish at the PTO
Nice job. I have just had my EX5810 delivered and am looking forward to clearing some of my 100 acres. It's a beast of a thing, I think it might be too big for me! Next to find some implements for it! Is your brush hog kioti branded?
They are awesome machines!
All my implements are TITAN implements. Not to be confused with titan attachments.
How many horsepower is your.. if you don't mind me.. thank you in advance
45hp. Its the NX4510. As with most things we always want more power, but this was a on sale model sitting on the lot they were trying to move a few years back and I would rather have had the savings instead of 5-10 more hp at the time.
Should be leading with the brush cutter not the tractor. Cringe
Thats a great way to 'ring' to the deck of the brush cutter
@@hcr-motorworks ??? Have never heard of this…explain
@@brettadams417 Backing up over shrubs or stumps can cause the blade to deflect so bad it literaly leaves a ring in the deck of the bush hog. If you ever see a perfectly round raised circle with chipped paint or rust on the top side of the deck thats exactly what happened which is why I drive forward and use the loader/grapple to push over the thick stuff, If I cant push it over I dont want to be using the bush hog to try and cut it.
@@hcr-motorworks this would happen the same going forward or backwards…zero difference. Has to do with what you go after not the direction. Going forward into an uncut area and then having to back up as you did in the vid means your exposing the underside of your tractor which is much more vulnerable and expensive then the rotary cutter. All rotary cutter’s eventually get wear and tear regardless of the direction…that’s literally why it’s a rotary cutter and not a lawn mower…it’s designed and purpose built for this. To help you out the better way is lift your cutter up a few feet back up about a cutter length and a half into the uncut then put cutter all the way down drive forward. Depending on how big the material is dictates how big to lift your cutter. If it’s not that big doesn’t need to be as high and can go longer distances backwards. This is how to properly do this activity.