I think you did an incredible job on it Ping, something you should be really proud of, keep up the good work.
Im late to the party, but I have to comment... What an unbelievable build!Going Topless
Well, at least the tractor is now. I pulled the cab off and thought I'd share my experience with those following my build.
The Good: Everything disconnected as planned; water, electric to panel and hazard lights. Foam and LDPE filler strips also were removed without incident. Both doors and rear window also were removed without so much as a curse word being uttered!
The Senior Moment: Since the last snow fall, I've been modifying my rear blade to use with my Rural King quick hitch. So, when I rolled the cart up to the back of the tractor to pull the cab.....oops! Somebody forgot about the quick hitch so, instead of modifying the cart, I pulled the quick hitch and was back in business.
The Best of Plans: Originally, I planned to install and remove the cab by myself. During the build phase this was never a problem, until now. During the final assembly after paint, I installed the roof after the frame was on the tractor. Fully assembled, it was just too awkward to pivot back by myself. This really became a 2 person job as the fan and ROPS needed to be pivoted out of the way as the cab rolled back too.
All in all, not too bad for the first time and considering I've got another year to figure out an easier way, not a total failure.
Hopefully, any future builders will read this and address those deficiencies in their design.
As usual, pictures below, comments welcome.
Regards
Thanks for the compliment. Still hoping I make the sticky pages one day.Im late to the party, but I have to comment... What an unbelievable build!