put big bolt on loader to tractor, put together all the hydraulic that control loader
loader almost attach to tractor, get big bolt and washer on all 8 connecting bolts on 4 side of tractor
start to figure out the hydraulic, some connectors are rusted out, weld on new ones
basically: clear the area, bring all hoses/fittings and get it figured out
yes, finally back at the shop, declare more task so it is on the record:
dont forget to adjust the idle (should have done it before putting on loader)
also, I can install some of the other parts that are orange: dash pieces, exhaust hanger, put the hood on, try to run it without access to decompression knob, etc
summary: put all bolts connecting loader to tractor with big washers on both side, fasten tight
clear out entire area, bring a pallet and bring all hydraulic hoses and fittings to it,
make progress on these task in the beautiful perfect shade, grateful to be at this point
@Henro
you are not admiring my approach, you are joesmith deep down, just take the filter off and let her eat
This thread is a mirror showing you nature/yourself...
remove all cinderblock and lumber away from area, clear your workspace
(i write this to talk to you or myself if I read this later)
Here's a pile of lumber/cinderblock that was used to put the loader on, and the infinite amount of cheap jack to line up bolts, and the DEEP crawling on ground trying to get the bolts in
I was thinking: why does this make me so dizzy and consume all my power?
That task where you bend down get real deep underneath, then have to lift your entire existence over a little washer,
is a huge energy consumer. I am at the point where I want to rig up massive structure above machines, then I simple lift up entire machine and make those areas accessible and not make me dizzy
you cannot "work hard" because you'll be so tired and unable to make progress, and not get the gold...
bring the blocks back out because you cant reach anything underneath without getting a head injury
spend another hour chest to the ground getting blocks in place
yes, deep in this region, cutting your arms tightening the bolts, trying to emulate how it was,
dont make it too perfect, rig it back up good enough,
got the bolts fully fastened on rear of tractor to loader connection, rig up the side piece that hold the exhaust hanger, clamp around exhaust
now: do the other side cover, get the biggest bolts laying around and put them on front bracket of tractor to loader connection,
might take off steering wheel, and put the dash over the diesel tank, move my glowplug/start switches, etc
keep reassembling, dont make yourself too dizzy, comprehend the task and how big it is/was,
"dont be in big hurry to get going sincce you already put 5-6 month of labor, whats the hurry all of a sudden?"
some methods being using to line the bolt holes: crow bar and lumber, cheap jack pushing up on loader,
got both side pieces that connect to fender and tractor attach, got the exhaust hanging fastened, put all 8 bolts fully fasten that hold loader to tractor, and the 6 bolts that hold tractor to loader front side
take off steering wheel, put the diesel tank cover, figure out your switches, bring all the hydraulic fittings and hoses to the tractor
narrate more once you get to that point
slow your roll, go smoke some meat, try to enjoy the reassembly...
while fatty meat smoke, you fasten the hardware, take out steering wheel, take out your switches, install dash, put few bols to mock everything, put the hood on, put steering wheel back on
"woah there she is, coming back to life, going back in time..."
Take hood back off, clear out a pallet, bring all the hydraulic part, bring the hydraulic controller, mount it...
she's mean, angry, ready to tear the earth, you can sense it
clear out a pallet, bring all jic 8 fitting/hose/ and the controller
mount the controller, start to mock the hose connection...
controller: take it apart, clean with compress air and diesel, mock it up onto tractor, drill one hole to fit another bolt
last I mocked this up, it fell and tractor ran it over, now the levers are not turning
plan: get the bolts on it tight, put real pressure on the switch trying to see if it can work again