mcmxi
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
***Current*** M6060HDC, MX6000HSTC & GL7000 ***Sold*** MX6000HST & BX25DLB
When I bought the MX6000 HST in February I had the dealer install three rear remotes with all three being the standard double acting variety. I have top-n-tilt on that tractor so for non-winter use I use one remote for the top cylinder (top) and one for the lift arm cylinder (tilt). For winter use I'm running a Land Pride SB1574 3-point snow blower and it needs two circuits, one for chute rotation and one for chute angle. I decided to remove the top link cylinder and replace it with the factory adjustable top link to free up a circuit and I figured I don't need to change the fore and aft angle of the blower once it's on the deck. So the current set up is one valve runs the lift arm cylinder, one runs the chute rotation and one runs the chute angle.
When I ordered the new MX6000 HSTC I wanted to have a double acting float valve out back for a batwing type mower or similar. So two of the valves are standard double acting, and one is a double acting with float. What I plan on doing once I move the SB1574 over to the new tractor is to run the lift arm cylinder on the float valve with the valve being in the float position. I'm thinking this could work well in that it will allow the blower to follow the asphalt surface regardless of how the rear tires are positioned. Currently I need to adjust the lift arm cylinder to deal with some off camber transitions that don't clean off well with the blower set up for a level surface.
Anyway, just a thought for anyone thinking about rear remotes. I might find that this doesn't work as well as I think it will but I can always run the float valve in "standard" mode.
When I ordered the new MX6000 HSTC I wanted to have a double acting float valve out back for a batwing type mower or similar. So two of the valves are standard double acting, and one is a double acting with float. What I plan on doing once I move the SB1574 over to the new tractor is to run the lift arm cylinder on the float valve with the valve being in the float position. I'm thinking this could work well in that it will allow the blower to follow the asphalt surface regardless of how the rear tires are positioned. Currently I need to adjust the lift arm cylinder to deal with some off camber transitions that don't clean off well with the blower set up for a level surface.
Anyway, just a thought for anyone thinking about rear remotes. I might find that this doesn't work as well as I think it will but I can always run the float valve in "standard" mode.