Wooden you know it!Taking the log way home ?
Son of a birch. I think ya got me.Better Spruce up your replies or else be left out on a limb, Pineing away...
My dad’s was similar (and for pickups) and was that you use 2wd going, if you get where you can’t go further, 4wd is to get back home.As my dad onec said "when the axle drags the dirt, it is time to stop mashing the stupid pedal"
That advice has saved me more than once!
View attachment 126220
LOL flipped it driving around with the loader up and a piece of firewood in the bucketThis one the operator claims that the ground was wet and the tractor lost its footing and rolled over. I believe that he was thrown from the tractor and he survived without injury. He admitted that he wasn't wearing a seat belt. I have a theory as to what happened, but I will hold my thoughts.
View attachment 126254
Mine actually told me that very same thing also. Then he told me to lock the hubs before going off road. Unless I wanted to get out in the muck and lock them when I got stuck.My dad’s was similar (and for pickups) and was that you use 2wd going, if you get where you can’t go further, 4wd is to get back home.
You figured it out. The tractor was transversing a swale and the angle got to be too much and the tires lost traction. I have a tilt meter in the cab of my BX23S and when the tilt meter gets to 5% I stop and reposition the tractor. At 10% I get really scared of going over, and at 15%, well I have never made it to that degree. The common denominator in all of these accidents is operator error.Dusty. Please share your thoughts on this . Loader could have been lower, but doesn’t look excessively high. ?? Ground surface is obviously mush.. maybe driver should have approached and crossed that swale in the ground at more of a 90 angle, facing it straight on.

I suspect that 13 took a nap within the first handful of hours of operation.True offroaders have their winch on the back bumper NOT the front. Up fron ,it's for show. Out back it'll get you OUT of the mess you drove into.
Would like to know how the tractor laid down on the left in #13. Ground seems fairly stable. Looks real new too !