Went out to move some larger rocks that I have dug out of the driveway over the years, and got a few into the bucket that I knew were at or just below what the max lifting capacity is at stock hydraulic pressure. Yes, I know running without ballast is a dumb idea but I kept the bucket low (max 2-3") or even slid it on the ground to get these rocks moved. I was filming a video about it for the YT channel, and decided to do some testing to see just how tippy things could get (obviously without me on the tractor and with the bucket low enough to stop any rollover). With a rock in the loader, and only slight pressure on the cutting edge with my foot, I can basically pick up the rear of the tractor.
Needless to say, even with loaded rears, and without shimming the hydraulic system, we'll be adding a ballast to the rear of the tractor. Leaning towards a simple ballast box at the moment to keep it more maneuverable the the alternative we are considering which is a box blade, even though the box blade would be better for maintaining the driveway.
New operators, don't mess around. I had a pretty good feel for the tractor and knew what I was getting into since I have run it in this configuration for a few years now, but a new owner coming from a larger machine might not be in the same boat. Stay safe!
Needless to say, even with loaded rears, and without shimming the hydraulic system, we'll be adding a ballast to the rear of the tractor. Leaning towards a simple ballast box at the moment to keep it more maneuverable the the alternative we are considering which is a box blade, even though the box blade would be better for maintaining the driveway.
New operators, don't mess around. I had a pretty good feel for the tractor and knew what I was getting into since I have run it in this configuration for a few years now, but a new owner coming from a larger machine might not be in the same boat. Stay safe!