I recently bought a used (obviously) L200 with a front-loader and finally had a weekend to put some hours on it; I don't love the way it handles. Between the weight distribution, 2WD, and manual transmission it's pretty unwieldy and feels dangerous on any kind of slope. I've already called my local dealership about a ROPS but I wanted some advice on ballast. Where would the weight do me the most good (Front wheel, back wheel, 3-pt, front weight rack, etc,...) and how much would be right for a tractor like this.
Problem #1 is that it barely takes any resistance for the rears to spin and it's hard not to dig in on soft dirt.
Problem #2 is hills... I feel safe enough going up hills because of the front loader, but going down with any extra weight is pretty hairy and our rock pit is at the top of the property. I know I need to learn to put it in low gear and trust it down a hill, but without the roll-bar it feels like it's screaming downhill. Would rear weights help the rear tires keep traction downhill without too much impact going up?
Problem #3 would be steering. Without power steering those front rollers love going sideways, will some front weight make this better or will weighing front and back cancel out?
I know this is an old tractor with a lot more personality than a modern hydro-static. I'm not expecting it to be a Cadillac but it's a working tractor and I want to get the most I can out of it; I really appreciate any advice.
Problem #1 is that it barely takes any resistance for the rears to spin and it's hard not to dig in on soft dirt.
Problem #2 is hills... I feel safe enough going up hills because of the front loader, but going down with any extra weight is pretty hairy and our rock pit is at the top of the property. I know I need to learn to put it in low gear and trust it down a hill, but without the roll-bar it feels like it's screaming downhill. Would rear weights help the rear tires keep traction downhill without too much impact going up?
Problem #3 would be steering. Without power steering those front rollers love going sideways, will some front weight make this better or will weighing front and back cancel out?
I know this is an old tractor with a lot more personality than a modern hydro-static. I'm not expecting it to be a Cadillac but it's a working tractor and I want to get the most I can out of it; I really appreciate any advice.