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3 foot bucket on a 3.5 ton

Palmer78

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
133
Location
Valley Springs, CA
Does anyone use a 3 foot digging bucket on a 3.5 ton mini? If so, what kind of ground do you use it in and how does the mini handle it? I could use a 3 foot bucket but I'm not sure if my 3.5 tonner could handle it.
 

Acivil

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 30, 2010
Messages
154
Location
Tennessee
Totally depends on the material, never used one, but the material typical in my region makes a 3.5 ton want to slide with a 24", we wouldn't have a prayer with a 36".
 

eric12

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2011
Messages
236
Location
new york
I've got a 3 foot digging bucket on a 3.5 ton machine with a long stick and it handles topsoil, clay, stone digging dry or wet with no problem. obviously if your reaching real far and high off to the side it'll be tippy but for the most part it doesn't seem to care or notice. I've also got a 4 foot ditching bucket and it works well, its not real deep but you can load it up and it works good.
 

Lindsey97

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2010
Messages
173
Location
oklahoma
I would love to have a 42"-48" ditching bucket for finish grading and handling loose material.

I have a takeuchi tb135 with a wainroy quick coupler. I think your machine will be fine with a 36" most of the time depending on ground conditions.
 

Lil' Puss

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 24, 2008
Messages
352
Location
WA
I have a 42" cleanout bucket also. Works great in all loose materials.
 

Palmer78

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
133
Location
Valley Springs, CA
eric12, thanks for the reply. That's exactly what I was looking for. What kind of clay are you digging in? I encounter hard clay sometimes that can be hard to dig with a 2 foot bucket. Is the clay you dig with the 3 footer soft and wet?
 

Ronsii

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 26, 2011
Messages
3,464
Location
Western Washington
Occupation
s/e Heavy equipment operator
We use a 3 footer on our case works great :) mainly used for finish grading and loading out loose stuff but you can dig with it ok just slower then a toothed 2 foot, the only thing it useless for is hardpan and frozen ground. I have also used a 3 footer on cat 3.5 ton... they get tippy easier than the case.
 

Dwan Hall

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2004
Messages
1,029
Location
Juneau, Alaska
Occupation
Self Employed
Use caution when digging anything hard. Keep the load centered in the bucket. Side loading these long buckets cause undue stress on the dipper by twisting the boom. Like picking up long logs from near the end instead of the center balancing the load. If used properly a long bucket 3' or larger can be your favorite bucket as is the 3' one I use on a TB015 weighing in at #3500 lbs. also watch your swing when using a loaded bucket there is a lot of weight out there. Stopping he swing to fast will also cause undue stress.
Use caution and you will love it.
 

Jim Dandy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
172
Location
VA
Dwan is right. I had a buddy of mine bend the boom on a JD 35 with a 3' bucket. He put a side load on it. I think they were digging and ran into a stump and instead of changing buckets they tried to grub the stump with the 3' bucket.
 

The Learner

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2012
Messages
200
Location
SE Victoria Australia
Occupation
Hydraulic specialist
in australia its common for 1.5 -1.7 tonne machines have 900mm buckets (roughly 3ft)
and many 3.0-3.5 sized machines have 1250mm buckets (4 ft)
you should be pretty right with a 3 footer on your 35
 
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