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A few weeks ago, I ordered a Hi Hitch for my riding mowers...
What is so nice about this product is that I can use the lower hitch for my normal garden carts and other riding mower accessories, but the hi hitch now allows me to put on a trailer hitch ball and move my empty boat and auto utility trailers. I installed it on one of my riding mowers and tested it out. It works really well. I am very happy with that purchase, especially, a few years ago they were selling for about $60.00, now less than $27.00!
Having said that, I won't normally be using the hi hitch for moving my empty trailers around. I mean, I moved them to their storage location, and they probably won't move again until next spring.
But I got to thinking, I wonder if I put a crate on that hi hitch and use it as a mount for a mini cargo box?
Today, I built a cargo box that installs on my hi hitch and is fastened my just one bolt, allowing me to easily remove the crate if/when I need to put on a hitch ball to move my trailers.
Here is a picture of the backside of my mower with the hi hitch installed...
I built a pallet wood crate to fit on top of the hi hitch. The crate is 12X24 inches, which is just about all the bigger I could make it because I did not want the cargo box sticking out wider than my mower.
Here is a picture of the pallet wood crate installed on the hi hitch...
In order to secure it to the hi hitch, I used a bolt, washer, and wingnut through the crate and underneath the top ball hitch hole. I went with the wingnut because @fuzzi suggested I use a wingnut on a different project, and I ended up buying an assortment kit of 150 wingnuts from Harbor Freight. The wingnut works well here because it will allow me to remove the bolt and the crate out in the field without the need for any other tools.
Here is a picture of the one bolt that is holding the crate in place on the hi hitch...
Although the crate stayed in place with just that one bolt, the mounted crate itself had a little flex from side to side. Not a problem if the box was loaded in the center, but I decided to add a support board underneath the box which made it a lot stronger and still will not negatively affect the function of using a trailer hitch ball if/when I remove the crate.
I have in mind to use that cargo box to hold my smaller pruning chainsaws, batteries and oil...
The idea for this cargo box on the riding mower came up this past week. We had a big windstorm a week ago and there were branches down on the ground all over my property. I was hitching up my cart, putting the saws and everything in the cart, but then I was burying everything in the cart when I filled it up with wood. I thought to myself, it sure would be nice to have a separate cargo box for my stuff so I don't have to pile the wood on top of the batteries, oil, etc...
The pallet wood crate is big enough to hold my pruning saws and accessories, but not big enough to hold my full sized chainsaws. That's OK, most of the cleanup work I do only requires my smaller pruning saws. If I need the bigger chainsaws, I'll have to transport them in the pull behind wagons. I will still be able to keep the batteries and bar oil in the new pallet wood cargo crate.
Here is a picture of the rig ready to roll...
I am really happy with my efforts on this project. I plan on leaving the pallet wood crate unpainted, but I could easily get some red or black paint to match the riding mower and paint the wood. That would look nice, too.
