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03/20/11, 08:41 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Colorado
Posts: 390
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Anyone here using walk behind tractors?
I have a thing for the walk behind tractors. I already have an old simplicity with a trailer load of implements in storage back in Arkansas, but I picked up another one last week. The one in Arkansas needs a new engine and some work, but the one I picked up out here runs like a top and has practically brand new tires.
My plan now is to rebuild the one back in Arkansas with a diesel engine. Thinking that might give me more options in the future. I will try to get pics of the new toy on here
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03/20/11, 08:55 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 1,368
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im not sure what you mean by walkbehind tractor.
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03/20/11, 09:38 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Iuka MS
Posts: 465
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Im crazy about them to I dont have one yet I do have 2 parts of one thats clutch steered. THe Italians have us beat on them they have some that will reverse the handle bars and ues them with a mini baler. I was upset a friend of mine passed away and had 4 David Bradley WTs that were in various shapes and sizes and all complete. THese along with some hard to find tractors were scrapped.
I got a lead on an older DB with cultivators and disks and a plow. I use bigger tractors found that using a friends with a mower to mow nut grass between my okra plants. At one time dad said when he was a teenager many large truck patch farmers used them for gardens up to 5 acres.
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03/20/11, 11:21 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Colorado
Posts: 390
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they are more popular back in the part of the country where people were working smaller acreage. I was very surprised to find one in Colorado. It came with a snow plow type blade to mount on the front. I already have a harrow, disc plow, several different plows as well as a stump saw setup that can also be mounted to a stand and run as a log saw.
Those BCS tractors are awesome, but cost as much or more than a regular tractor. Plus you will rarely find cheap used stuff for them.
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03/21/11, 09:14 AM
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In Remembrance
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: South Central Kansas
Posts: 11,076
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maverickxxx
im not sure what you mean by walkbehind tractor.
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Two wheeled tractor; such as the BCS, Grillo, Simplicity, David Bradley, etc.
One sales company for new units.
http://www.earthtoolsbcs.com/index.html
I have and use a BCS two wheeled tractor. My main use of it is with rototiller attachment. I don't have a sickle bar mower but sure would like one. I wouldn't object to a rotary mower either.
BTW, here is a photo of my daughter with my first one. http://i163.photobucket.com/albums/t...s/scan0619.jpg I made the blade from an old water heater. It moved snow pretty well. It came with a cultivator and a sickle bar mower.
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Last edited by Windy in Kansas; 03/21/11 at 09:18 AM.
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03/21/11, 10:10 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: EastTN: Former State of Franklin
Posts: 4,485
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maverickxxx
im not sure what you mean by walkbehind tractor.
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Something like a heavy duty tiller...only you can easily remove the tiller part, and use other implements on the machine....such as a rotary plow, ( see video), mowers, blades, mini balers, and so on.
I bought a Grillo 107 with 8hp diesel engine on it from Earth Tools ( in KY ) few years back when it was time to replace my 25 year old Ariens rear tine tiller.
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03/21/11, 09:53 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Back in the USSR
Posts: 9,961
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I have a Goldoni set up for tilling. I've never been able to stall the diesel.
Last edited by Darren; 03/22/11 at 11:12 AM.
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03/22/11, 10:49 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: MO
Posts: 935
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I have had several over the years, and really enjoyed using them. Then I realized the ones I had, had no kill switch or safety switch to stop the machine in emergency. If you are in reverse and walking backward and happen to trip, the machine would continue on over the top of you and keep going. So think about getting one with a dead mans release for moving. Like you have to hold the handle down or it wont go, and when released the machine stops automatically, and do not tie these down! Be safe, best wishes, ray
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Ray
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03/22/11, 04:46 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Maine
Posts: 3,152
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I have a Grillo 107d. 11 hp Honda engine, 28" tiller. It makes the 8 hp Troy-bilt I used to have look like a child's toy in comparison. I'm extremely happy with it.
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03/22/11, 07:23 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 7,692
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray
I have had several over the years, and really enjoyed using them. Then I realized the ones I had, had no kill switch or safety switch to stop the machine in emergency. If you are in reverse and walking backward and happen to trip, the machine would continue on over the top of you and keep going. So think about getting one with a dead mans release for moving. Like you have to hold the handle down or it wont go, and when released the machine stops automatically, and do not tie these down! Be safe, best wishes, ray
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Think it would be more economical to make your own dead man switch than buy a whole new walk behind tractor. Course with a new tractor, you would have somebody you could sue if something goes wrong....
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03/24/11, 09:29 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Levittown, Bucks, Pennsylvania
Posts: 576
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My father had a business mowing wed lots, mostly inside city limits, using a Simplicity FB w/ Sickle bar head. You could always lift up on the handles & pin the head allowing the wheels to slip. It also had a freewheel so you could push down and rotate at the end of the row and cut back the other side & could do it in tight places.
Ours had two Clinton 7.5 hp engines we'd keep rebuilding & swapping them. It had three Sickle bars, a garden plow, wheel weights, chains, snow plow. Later we added a rider w/ 4 foot sickle bar.
We used to trim w/ scythes and Austrian grass blades.
Last edited by Wis Bang 2; 03/24/11 at 09:33 PM.
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03/24/11, 10:15 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Colorado
Posts: 390
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I wish I could get my hands on a sickle bar for it. I am probably going to try to pick up a david bradley to restore because I think they have the best looking hood of any tractor ever made. Of course I am keeping a weather eye out for an economy or powerking tractor.
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03/24/11, 10:39 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Colorado
Posts: 390
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I wish I could get my hands on a sickle bar for it. I am probably going to try to pick up a david bradley to restore because I think they have the best looking hood of any tractor ever made. Of course I am keeping a weather eye out for an economy or powerking tractor.
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03/26/11, 12:49 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Levittown, Bucks, Pennsylvania
Posts: 576
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sandc
I wish I could get my hands on a sickle bar for it. I am probably going to try to pick up a david bradley to restore because I think they have the best looking hood of any tractor ever made. Of course I am keeping a weather eye out for an economy or powerking tractor.
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We traveled w/ an extra head in case something, er WHEN something broke. We would run them an hour or two and would grease em when we filled the gas tank.
There were parts that HAD to be on there or it wouldn't work right. It would mow! we were called out to a job in anther town, corner lot next to the house 'Mom & Dad' built but daughter never did. Mowing in from the street the ground dropped b/4 rising to a neighbor's property line. It walked right thru as the growth got taller and then tapered down. Felt like I cut thru a forest of stuff.
Simplicity sold the parts for the 15 yr old machine [I'd bet they STILL do!] bu the cost of the blades rose to be too high. Dad even bought a rivet tool and drills & taps and steel & we'd recover the teeth and build our own blades in the winters but finally sold it when I left for college. We'd scavenger any similar sized sickle bar we found for the cast 'teeth' and bed plates. We ended up w/ multi color cutters...
Last edited by Wis Bang 2; 03/26/11 at 12:55 PM.
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04/08/11, 08:47 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southwestern Wisconsin
Posts: 7
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Here's what I did yesterday with my BCS walk-behind tractor.
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04/13/11, 01:07 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Eastern N.C.
Posts: 8,834
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04/15/11, 07:43 AM
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: PA
Posts: 253
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This may sound like a dumb question for those of you in the know but, what all type attachments can you get for them and are all the attachments fairly standard (can fit different machines like three point attachments for big tractors) or do you have to buy only one brand of attachment for different machines?
Okay, I lied, here is another question. What about the old Gravely walk behinds? How do they compare and where do they fit into the mix?
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04/15/11, 10:24 AM
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In Remembrance
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: South Central Kansas
Posts: 11,076
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There are all sorts of implements for use with the tractors, even including round balers. Seems as if you can dream it and have the money you can have it. Other than spline for powered equipment a lot of simple equipment can be homemade.
BCS and Grillo have SOME things that will interchange, but not all. See a catalog here:
http://www.earthtoolsbcs.com/html/bcs_implements.html
The old Gravely is simply one of many small two wheel driven power units. They were considered pretty bulletproof and great workhorses. David Bradley is the one we often see photos of from years past. Simplicity is another.
One thing I don't really see available that is often shown in foreign video clips are the carts used behind the two wheeled tractors that connect to the power take off shaft which then drive the cart wheels to assist in traction for large loads. I wouldn't mind having such a cart. The drive shaft to the rear wheels extends back through the tongue of the trailer thus enclosing it.
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04/22/11, 04:31 PM
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: indiana
Posts: 173
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i have a David Bradly with plow , disc, cultivator , & a blade. if you go to mytractor.com they have a walkbehind forum thats pretty good
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08/22/13, 05:34 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Windy in Kansas
There are all sorts of implements for use with the tractors, even including round balers. Seems as if you can dream it and have the money you can have it. Other than spline for powered equipment a lot of simple equipment can be homemade.
BCS and Grillo have SOME things that will interchange, but not all. See a catalog here:
http://www.earthtoolsbcs.com/html/bcs_implements.html
The old Gravely is simply one of many small two wheel driven power units. They were considered pretty bulletproof and great workhorses. David Bradley is the one we often see photos of from years past. Simplicity is another.
One thing I don't really see available that is often shown in foreign video clips are the carts used behind the two wheeled tractors that connect to the power take off shaft which then drive the cart wheels to assist in traction for large loads. I wouldn't mind having such a cart. The drive shaft to the rear wheels extends back through the tongue of the trailer thus enclosing it.
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Sadly, nothing on a Gravely interchanges with a BCS OR Grillo.
The BCS is a reasonably good machine, but for the cost it should be. Nothing interchanges with Gravely, which is the single biggest reason I have not bought one. If Gravely still made the old ones with a few updates it would be a heavier but more durable longer lived machine than the BCS or Grillo. Up until recently it seems like the BCS and Grillo all had European common small engines that were not common here.
In the Gravely's heyday local parts and service was readily available from a substantial dealer network. While I am sure the current BCS and Grillo importer is an honest and diligent person if he goes out or if regulatory changes make the import business no longer feasible you are in trouble. It is flat impossible to buy anything from Italy over the phone or internet and I say that as a former Alfa Romeo owner. Italy has good manufacturing capabilities but business is chaotic and messy plus the language barrier.
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