>>>>>>>>>>>I have no need for duals on my BX23S as I know how to drive it within 'design limits'. Had a 30 year old ST12 with rare duals/forklift, zero rear axle issues so I'm curious about duals on BX tractors. While some disagree, no one has yet to show proof of damage.
Just curious as to how adding additional wheels is more negative in terms of stress than say filling the rear tires with liquid? The weight and work required to make them rotate would be identical if not more right?Take a one foot pipe wrench and see how much force you get then take a 4 foot wrench and see how much force you get, that's the same issue with duals.
Duals multiply the force on the axles tremendously, it's not a matter of weight it's a matter of torque.
It's not rotational force that's the issue, it leverage, the farther you move away from the bearing the more leverage you apply to those bearings and housing.Just curious as to how adding additional wheels is more negative in terms of stress than say filling the rear tires with liquid? The weight and work required to make them rotate would be identical if not more right?
I have a Kubota BX25 and I have a set of duals on the back and on the front not for being tippy but for floatation I run mine through a lot of swampy ground with a 4 foot brush hog and anyone with a BX knows they are useless in any real mud because of ground clearence there is no clearence but with the front and back duals it floats on top and works great I have been 5+ years on duals without a single issue and have mowed hundreds of swamp acres no one else seems to want to touch. I made my spacers from well casing for rear they bolt on with the inner wheel which I changed from lug bolts to wheel studs a the spacers have a flange that the outside daul bolts to and on the front I used a set of old riding mower front rims and cut the outside bead seats off and drilled holes to matched the kubota weight holes in the rims and just used long carriage bolts it all works good. Only issue I have had and it is hard to say if it is from the duals or just a kubota issue because many have had the same issue it seems I have to do inner tie rods once a year I seem to get about 300-400 hrs out of them but not sure if that is dual issue or kubota issue since I have never ran my tractor without the duals.A number of guys say the BX tractors can be tippy …. has anybody come up with a dual rear wheel mod ??
There was a guy that put duals on the front and back of his BX some years ago. I saw a video on YouTube of the tractor in operation, and there was a thread either here or over at TBN on this same subject.like this, "fill your boots" LOL.
Not sure what size spacers you ended up with, but I bought a set of 2 inch spacers for my son in law's new BX23S a month ago, and they cost something like $44 delivered. I think from walmart, could have been Amazon. (how quickly one forgets as the years add up).Yeesh, 400 Canucks for 2 spacers for my BX23s..... !!! I got mine for a case of brown pops and $50 for the 'blanks'.
Can you post a link to that kit? Thanks...Oh wow, that's pretty neat! I wouldn't put duals on the front for reasons already stated, but I wouldn't hesitate to add them to the rear if I had a set. Really interesting set up ... would make my BX25D a little more useful putting in this forest road to my back-40 through a swap! The stabilizers on the back-hoe mostly get used for lifting the back of the tractor up off the ground so I can slide boards under the tires. I suppose I could remove the hoe and make the tractor lighter - but then if I got stuck it would be harder to get out lol. Anyone sell this as a kit online?
edit - I found them online ...
Sure thing ...Can you post a link to that kit? Thanks...