I have forks on my B2601. Pin on - so I have to bang the pins out of the bucket, bang them back into the forks. But same effect as SSQA, just more labour intensive.
I have a diesel tank that I stack on a shelf that has very low clearance. I take it down every three weeks, put it on the trailer, take it away and fill it, bring it back, onto the front end loader and around the back of the house to transfer into the house tank.
I have maybe 3 hours total using the forks. And putting that tank away I have about 2 inches of clearance - it needs to go up and down gently or it bangs into stuff. It hasn't been a big problem. I can lift and curl it, drop and dump it, keep it pretty level (it doesn't seal well, so when full if I get lift and curl wrong, I get diesel on the ground). I usually run lower revs for fork work, but the OPs view seems to be a problem when lowering - which isn't really controlled by revs.
So I'm back to either I'm just a rock star (I'd like to think that, but it's unlikely), or the OP is a long way off on touch (possible, but the way he describes it doesn't sound like he's just being rough), or his tractor is adjusted quite a bit different than mine. As I say, very hard to work out which just based on what some guy types on the internet - you need to see it. So you need someone who says their tractor is fine, and either they need to come drive your tractor, or you need to go drive theirs. Then we know if it's the machine or the operator.
I have a diesel tank that I stack on a shelf that has very low clearance. I take it down every three weeks, put it on the trailer, take it away and fill it, bring it back, onto the front end loader and around the back of the house to transfer into the house tank.
I have maybe 3 hours total using the forks. And putting that tank away I have about 2 inches of clearance - it needs to go up and down gently or it bangs into stuff. It hasn't been a big problem. I can lift and curl it, drop and dump it, keep it pretty level (it doesn't seal well, so when full if I get lift and curl wrong, I get diesel on the ground). I usually run lower revs for fork work, but the OPs view seems to be a problem when lowering - which isn't really controlled by revs.
So I'm back to either I'm just a rock star (I'd like to think that, but it's unlikely), or the OP is a long way off on touch (possible, but the way he describes it doesn't sound like he's just being rough), or his tractor is adjusted quite a bit different than mine. As I say, very hard to work out which just based on what some guy types on the internet - you need to see it. So you need someone who says their tractor is fine, and either they need to come drive your tractor, or you need to go drive theirs. Then we know if it's the machine or the operator.