Landscape rake gauge wheels
laboiserie
Join Date: Jun 2007 Posts: 7 Durham, Maine |
2010-04-29 170447
Does anybody ever use a landscape rake with gauge wheels and putting the wheels in front of the rake rather than behind? Seems to be much more controllable when the wheels are in front of the rake. with the wheels in back, I can't seem to be able to prevent it from digging in too aggressively. With the wheels in front with adjusting the top link, I can easily control it. Am I the only one doing this or do others do this also?
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Landscape rake gauge wheels
ronald65
Join Date: Aug 2005 Posts: 107 Montana |
2010-04-29 170451
Hi; I think you a fooling yourself.with the wheels in front of the rake you have defeated the premise .picture a road grader vs a blade on the 3 point( what you have with wheels in front of rake) when front of tractor goes up,rear goes down.you just moved ripple.with wheels on back you fill in low spots Like road grader. Teeth are suspended between tractor and wheels at rear of teeth.eventually everything is smooth and level.Don't try to do everything in one pass.Give it a try! Ron ....
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Landscape rake gauge wheels
greg_g
Join Date: Jan 2004 Posts: 1816 Western Kentucky Pics |
2010-04-30 170455
Quote:
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Sticking the wheels up front is at best counterproductive. The idea of a rake is to smooth things out. But every dip and bump that front mounted wheels encounter, will be matched by an equal rise and fall of the tines following them. Mounted conventionally, those dips and bumps should be gone (or reduced) before the gauge wheels get there.
FWIW, I now consider the big money I originally spent for optional gauge wheels - was completely wasted. I truly over-estimated their effectiveness, and haven't used them for years. It didn't take me long to realize that a combination of draft control and my hydraulic toplink - beats the hell out of gauge wheels any day of the week.
//greg// ....
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Landscape rake gauge wheels
hardwood
Join Date: Dec 2002 Posts: 3583 iowa |
2010-04-30 170460
I've never had them and really can't think of any reason why I'd want them. With a bit if practice you can regulate it by eye with the three point lift lever.
The only way I can vision any benefit would be to have a caster type wheel like on the back of a rotary cutter way out back like five foot ot more then a loose three point top link. That might make it work like the real long land leveler machines they use in gravity irrigation fields. ....
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