Rhino HEAVY Duty Tillers. MUST SEE! (Not click-bait...)

3 years ago
16

Recently I bought a Rhino Heavy duty tiller, the Rhino SRM81V tiller because I use the tractor power till a lot on my land management projects between our Southern Illinois farm and our Western Kentucky farm. I did a LOT of research on deciding which Heavy Duty tiller brand that I wanted to purchase that would last a LONG time, and increase my productivity, so that I could Till ground a little faster than I have in the past with my last 6 foot tiller. So, after much research I bought the Rhino SRM81V, their heavy duty model power tiller. According to Rhino's literature you could run these tillers on a tractor with a PTO horsepower if between 40 and 70. I specifically bought this Kioti RX7320 tractor because it has a 63 HP PTO, which was plenty of power to run this Rhino tiller... OR WAS IT??? Join me on the first day of putting this tiller to use on our Kentucky farm. Needless to say, from the minute it hit the dirt I was not really impressed... WHY, you might ask? Well, my tractor was bogging down with the new tiller! Did I not have enough PTO power on my tractor?!! (63 hp pto). Join me for the whole story, the troubleshooting, and SOLUTION to this Rhino Heavy Duty tiller! Thanks for joining me today, and as always, please, if you enjoy our content, please hit the Like button, comment for us, and share this video to help us grow our Country living and land management family! We greatly appreciate that! Also consider subscribing to our channel to follow Kioti tractor projects like this, food plots, duck ponds, wildlife conservation projects, wildlife habitat improvement projects, our Kentucky farmhouse rehab project, Bobcat T650 skid steer projects, building watering holes, wildlife ponds, Bobcat mini excavator projects, DIY rustic home decor, DIY landscaping, DIY rustic barn wood projects, hunting, fishing, building roads, installing culvert pipes, fixing pond dam leaks, and much more country living adventures! Thank you. Kapper Outdoors, living the dream, one acre at a time.

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