I said it serves them well... do you think they are going to tell you when their is a design issue on small scale? Look at most TSB's, most are kept at dealer level, and only get fixed if the consumer complains about the issue. So for this situation of say a backhoe combined with weights or ballast tires overloading this specific machine in some way for the small percentage of buyers, it is easier for them to be elusive on the info. We all know how descriptive lawyers can make things, so there is no grey area when they want to. When a manufacturer makes a point to warn you but not give a reason, they are protecting themselves. Them being vague is for them. Nothing against any manufacturer, they all do this. Ill give Kubota props, because at least they disclaim a possible issue. They could have said nothing, and this conversation would have never happened because the OP wouldn't have read it. If you designed tractors would you describe to a would be consumer all the areas you found in R&D that could be an issue? Especially if the issue only occurred when you equipped the machine in a 2% configuration with no guarantee of injury or failure. No you wouldn't, your marketability would be poor. The consumers place the liability to disclose on the manufactures. The manufacturers will still chose to protect themselves in smaller margins of error. They are meeting this liability by disclosing a non compatibility, they don't have to describe why.