torch
Well-known member
Equipment
B7100HSD, B2789, B2550, B4672, 48" cultivator, homemade FEL and Cab
I know the tractor has these features and I did play with them once or twice. i proved the tractor could turn much tighter in 2wd if I stomped on the inside rear brake and I could lock the go-pedal in forward for a long drive down the road but for my usage they weren't really called for and were largely forgotten. Besides, some genius at Kubota put the brake pedals on the same side of the tractor as the go pedal, and I only have one right foot.
I make a rink out on the lake every year once the ice is thick enough. Normally, I clear off an area, cut a hole in the ice, drop in a submersible pump and flood it to level things out. This year, with the on-again-off-again warm weather, there actually was a pretty decent surface provided by Mother Nature. Under the most recent 8" of snow. All I really needed to do was clear the snow and scrape the odd bump off the ice.
The snowblower knocked off the worst of the snow. I took the toothbar off for the scraping. Now here's the problem: There's ice underneath. Smooth, skateable ice. Not conducive to steering -- not with any sort of downforce on the bucket edge, anyway. The tractor just kind of went where the tractor wanted to go. If only there was some way to travel the length of the rink in a straight line with the steering effectively out of commission.
By now, you've probably figured out where I'm going with this.
I'd start at one end, point the tractor at the other, set the bucket at a scraping angle, put some pressure on it, hit the forward pedal, immediately engage the mechanical "cruise control" and then use the brakes to keep things pointed the right way. At the end of the pass I'd get the right foot back on the go pedal, release the "cruise control" and then curl the load up for dumping as normal.
For a feature ostensibly intended to make tighter turns, the independent brakes did a good job of keeping the tractor from turning at all!
Now I can officially state I have a use for every feature of the tractor. I'll sleep better at night. <lol>
I make a rink out on the lake every year once the ice is thick enough. Normally, I clear off an area, cut a hole in the ice, drop in a submersible pump and flood it to level things out. This year, with the on-again-off-again warm weather, there actually was a pretty decent surface provided by Mother Nature. Under the most recent 8" of snow. All I really needed to do was clear the snow and scrape the odd bump off the ice.
The snowblower knocked off the worst of the snow. I took the toothbar off for the scraping. Now here's the problem: There's ice underneath. Smooth, skateable ice. Not conducive to steering -- not with any sort of downforce on the bucket edge, anyway. The tractor just kind of went where the tractor wanted to go. If only there was some way to travel the length of the rink in a straight line with the steering effectively out of commission.
By now, you've probably figured out where I'm going with this.
I'd start at one end, point the tractor at the other, set the bucket at a scraping angle, put some pressure on it, hit the forward pedal, immediately engage the mechanical "cruise control" and then use the brakes to keep things pointed the right way. At the end of the pass I'd get the right foot back on the go pedal, release the "cruise control" and then curl the load up for dumping as normal.
For a feature ostensibly intended to make tighter turns, the independent brakes did a good job of keeping the tractor from turning at all!
Now I can officially state I have a use for every feature of the tractor. I'll sleep better at night. <lol>