It's a case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.I'm late on this thread. I had twisted the quick attach coupler on the loader on my B2601. Took the coupler off the tractor and took it to a shop who put a rod through the connecting pipe, heated the pipe with a torch and bent the coupler back into alignment.
So, now to keep it from doing that again I've looked at the coupler to understand the design. Basically, the connection is a piece of 1/8" wall pipe that goes through a hole in each side of each arm to the coupler. It then received a weld around the pipe connecting it in two places to each of the couplers. Since the torque that twisted it before acted around the single pipe in place now, I was thinking of cutting two more holes in each plate and welding another piece of pipe to increase the resistance to the torque that can occur. The increased weight would be only the piece of pipe added. (For 1 " pipe, Schedule 40 is 1.7 lbs/ft and sched 80 is 2.1 lb/ft.) Matching the length of my existing pipe (37.5 inches) means I'm adding 5-6 lbs relatively close to the lift fulcrum of the loader arm. Book says I currently have 750 lbs lift capability so that's only about a .8% increase in weight. Not significant in my mind.
Has anyone else attempted to beef up their coupler? And if so, where did they attach the extra support? I'm wondering about any other maintenance I may need to do on this thing in the future and if additional support could get in the way.
If you bend something you are working beyond the design limits. Yes you can beef up the QA but then you face problems in the next weakest link. Boom? Tractor?
If you use the kitchen butter knife as a screwdriver don't blame the knife when it bends.