Had an interesting experience at the weekend while I was in rough woodland cover running my L3901, one side of the rear ballast box came unattached. I was doing a lot of grapple loader work, back and forth loading tree roots that were piled up in many places of an area I had previously been clearing. At one point I went forward into a pile of stacked roots with the grapple and felt a jolt at the back of the tractor, looking down I saw that I had lost the lynch pin from the left side of the rear arm and the ballast box pin had come out of the 3pt arm.
I guess a branch or root had some how popped out my lynch pin.
I could not move forward as I was against a pile of roots and could not reverse due to my ballast box which was hanging off the back of the tractor at an angle in the soft ground. I turned the tractor off and dismounted, there was no apparent damage I had just lost the lynch pin. It's at this moment you realize what 600 lbs of rear ballast means!!! There was no way I was moving that no matter how hard I pulled, my friend came back with the dump trailer and together we tried to move the ballast box, not a chance, it was sort of wedged and at a 30 degree angle. It was a 15 minute ride in the back of the dump trailer back to the barn to pick up the MX5800 with front loader, forks and a lifting strap as well as get a new lynch pin.
It took 30 seconds with the MX to lift the ballast box level and reconnect the 3pt arm, all was well again. Not sure what I would have done if that was the only machine I had and it was stuck in that way, I guess I would have just had to empty my ballast box of the gravel thats in there, not much fun. Had it been solid cement I could not have emptied the ballast box.
Rough woodland clearing environments can do a lot of damage to a tractor, I try to be real careful and on this occasion it was a 30 minute issue with no damage. Maybe I'll start zip tying the lynch pins in place on my 3pt hitch attachment
I guess a branch or root had some how popped out my lynch pin.
I could not move forward as I was against a pile of roots and could not reverse due to my ballast box which was hanging off the back of the tractor at an angle in the soft ground. I turned the tractor off and dismounted, there was no apparent damage I had just lost the lynch pin. It's at this moment you realize what 600 lbs of rear ballast means!!! There was no way I was moving that no matter how hard I pulled, my friend came back with the dump trailer and together we tried to move the ballast box, not a chance, it was sort of wedged and at a 30 degree angle. It was a 15 minute ride in the back of the dump trailer back to the barn to pick up the MX5800 with front loader, forks and a lifting strap as well as get a new lynch pin.
It took 30 seconds with the MX to lift the ballast box level and reconnect the 3pt arm, all was well again. Not sure what I would have done if that was the only machine I had and it was stuck in that way, I guess I would have just had to empty my ballast box of the gravel thats in there, not much fun. Had it been solid cement I could not have emptied the ballast box.
Rough woodland clearing environments can do a lot of damage to a tractor, I try to be real careful and on this occasion it was a 30 minute issue with no damage. Maybe I'll start zip tying the lynch pins in place on my 3pt hitch attachment
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