cmustang
Member
Equipment
B7100hst 50" tiller Dodge 2500 diesel 700 Grizzly 79 K5 blazer 40" Boggers
Looks like that will also take some strain off the belhousing connection which is a good thing. Pretty sure all the factory subframes reinforce that area ,i think my 8200's subframe goes all the way to the rear end housing.I finished adding to the sub-frame, without these the main mounting bolt were getting worked a little.
With the rest of the supports in place it doesn't move at all!
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What you don't have a set of those?btw...studded tires???
"What you don't have a set of those?"What you don't have a set of those?
They are all the rage this year!
Great for taking you Kubota for a spin on the frozen lakes!
They are an example of how to overcome an overwhelming "Need more traction requirement"!
They are studded snow tires off of a K5 Blazer that I have a set of 2 link crossbar snow chains for, and they happened to be the same height as the R1's that I have for it. Ballasted with calcium chloride they weigh in at 175lbs each, better than the 110lbs of the R1's.
I live way up north in the Idaho mountains and have an average of about 4 feet of snow on the ground all winter long, and a lot more when it's snowing!
Our driveway is 1/4 mile long and some of it is 10% grade for about 500ft so I need all the traction I can get! I also snowplow or blow 1/4 mile of private road too to get to the county road. So with 1/2 mile of work I'll take all the traction I can get!
Wolfman, I have finished my FEL on the old B7100 manual, and it works well. I would post photos, but this site rejects anything big enough to actually see, so I'm a bit baffled about that.
The cross frame bolts to the front trio of bolt-holes on the transmission case which were probably intended for a belly mower mount. There's an ear each side going forward to bolt to the lower pair of aft bolts on the front suspension bracket, and another longish bracket going aft to bolt up under the rear diff. So the weight and twisting moments are taken on three points as widely separated as seemed practicable.
The two uprights of the frame are bolted to the ends of the cross frame, and there is a pair of forward braces from part-way up the uprights going to a bit of 100 x 100 angle bolted to the front of the front suspension bracket. The whole thing's probably overkill, but it's not likely to either fall apart or damage the tractor.
The hydraulics work well, using the existing pump and taking the feed as I said in a previous post, off the outlet under the seat.
Anyone who wants photos is welcome to PM me and I'll happily email them. They're about 1.5MB each.
Thanks!Great job,
You could have probably saved some money with smaller hoses.
I used fiberglass cloth to repair the holes in my B8200's hood then gave it and the side panels a new protective coat of spray can orange, too bad the rest of the tractor still looks like a spotted leopard. lol