https://www.wfmachines.com/attachments/sleevehitch_color_2-jpg.257714/ Brinly attachment brochure.
I also have a CAT-0 12-in Brinly-Hardy made in 1981. The nice thing is, it has a plate mount for the CAT-0. I can remove the plate and then mount the plow to my drawbar CAT-1 and figure out a top-link attachment. Brinly does offer a conversion to CAT-1 as well. I've seen 2 on eBay.https://www.wfmachines.com/attachments/sleevehitch_color_2-jpg.257714/ Brinly attachment brochure.
Jake, I tried this Brinley CC 500 out and it failed miserably with my CAT-1 drawbar and a chain off of the top-link. I don't have a 3PT CAT-1 adapter for it like the picture above I had shared.That's a Brinly CC 500 cultivator, the center shoe can be removed so you could straddle a row and cultivate on either side of it. They also had a wide "duck foot" shoe for that model. I have two like that one and one CC600 with spring tooth harrow tines.
And someone putting it to much more uses in this thread.That video is the reason I bought mine years ago.
Noel
You have to drive those wedge shaped pins in TIGHT to have them hold. Aftger you have them tight, hit them again. Learned that the hard way. Local welding/Fabrication shop made me sever extra pins and the anchor bars.. I wonder if there is a better way to hold those clips on so as not to loose any of the hardware parts.
From the link,
View attachment 72462
I've pounded those pins in and was afraid to cut into the white paint.As Chieffan said, you have to drive those keeper pins in, for ad hoc replacements I've used T shaped pins used in metal concrete forms. They are thinner than the Brinly pins, but they are thin enough to use two side by side in the standard keepers. These were made for garden tractors from about the sixties to early eighties, and mainly to cultivate gardens.