so i have a new (12hr) l4701 and putting the rod on , i put it on as per the directions , raised the bucket and it fell off. am i missing something?
i used every bolt in the kitA bolt or two maybe.. sorry, my first thought! I can't help since I don't have one but the good folks on here will chime in with help. Welcome to the forum!
Hi. I was following this thread because that’s apparently what I did. One of the SSQA levers wasn’t completely down when I was hauling a bale of hay. The bales feel loose on that side. I jumped out and fixed it. That was a couple of days ago no problem. But today the high the bucket level rod fell off. I’ll go take a look at it again, but how did the two, am I missing something how did the lever interact with the rod. But thank you for this answer in advance.View attachment 65838
This is a little fuzzy because it’s zoomed in, but for the factory level rod on the LA765 loader the only thing I know of that would potentially impact the bucket attachment is the pin in the photo. You remove the regular pin (short) and replace with the longer pin in the photo which has the connector to attach the pipe part of the level rod assembly on the bucket end. Kind of hard to imagine you took out the short pin and just left the curl cylinder swinging in the wind. Even if you did, can’t imagine that causing the bucket to completely fall off.
Of course if you forgot to lock the SSQA levers that would do it. (Yes, I have done that myself.)
Of course if you’re dealing with a non-OEM level rod, I have no clue.
Seriously doubt the two are related. Don’t know if your bucket level indicator is same style as mine or not. If no, the rest of this may be irrelevant.Hi. I was following this thread because that’s apparently what I did. One of the SSQA levers wasn’t completely down when I was hauling a bale of hay. The bales feel loose on that side. I jumped out and fixed it. That was a couple of days ago no problem. But today the high the bucket level rod fell off. I’ll go take a look at it again, but how did the two, am I missing something how did the lever interact with the rod. But thank you for this answer in advance.
Seriously doubt the two are related. Don’t know if your bucket level indicator is same style as mine or not. If no, the rest of this may be irrelevant.
The upper part of the OEM level rod on mine looks like this:
View attachment 102295
The little keeper bolt circled on the left side of the picture keeps the pin from rotating so the plate on the other end of the pin stays in the same position relative to the boom. As best I recall, it is possible to install such that the plate the rod slides through is oriented to some position other than shown, but it should be installed as shown.
The set screw circled on the right holds the chrome rod in place relative to the tube it rides in as it slides back and forth through the hole in the plate.
If the pin for the upper end of the curl cylinder is in place, the keeper bolt is in place, and the set screw is tight the upper end shouldn’t fall apart.
Again, if you have a different style indicator all that may be irrelevant.
Your level indicator is a bit different from mine. Looks to be same general principle.Thank you. I don’t see how they can be related either. It’s an LX 2610 with almost 50 hours on it. The dealer will be out here on Monday. I’m going to keep using it, I don’t think affects anything in terms of performance or safety. I’ve had some weird issues over the years, but this literally just “fell off.” I’m holding it next to the connection point just for illustrative purposes. Interesting thread.