I done something stupid this weekend folks. I was using my disc harrow, and elected not to put a bucket or anything on the front of the tractor just to have a little extra more turning room. Everything went well, until I got off the tractor after parking it. I happen to look down and notice I had bent the little bar that goes between the little quick attach plates on the front. I scratched my head and thought back, and could remember a time or two I had pulled up on a tree, and just lightly bumped it before reversing, but we are talking very light bump, and on a small tree that went between the loader arms. Each case I was intentionally trying to move up as much as possible to make a reverse and turn around in a tight area. Honestly in the moment I was not even remembering this little bar, Or I wouldn't have intentionally pushed up into the tree like this, I was also thinking I had all the room up to the bigger cross bar. Looking down at the bent bar though I kinda kicked myself. This tractor has just over 50 hours on it, its still brand new essentially. While the little bend doesn't seem to affect anything at all functionally, it is just annoying the piss out of me and I want to fix it. Would you fix it or leave it alone?
I tried using a 4LB. sledge hammer with a piece of wood to blunt the blow but that didn't budge it, and its hard to swing the hammer at the right angle. I came up with another idea I haven't tried yet but I think it will work - Put one of my big heavy duty ratchet straps around it, and around a big pine tree, lock the brakes down on the tractor and drop the disc into the ground and start ratcheting on the bar slowly. I think this would probably work, at least in theory. I could perhaps even put a length of 2x4 on the back end of the bar that will take the force of the ratchet strap, and distribute the weight along the full bar once it straightens out. One thing I don't want to do is make it worse than it is, by somehow exerting too much force and bending it the other way and further weakening it. Yes I know its very minor, but Its my brand new tractor and I hate seeing that bent bar! From what I can tell the bend is not causing any shift in angle on the quick attach plates. I can still attach my bucket fine and wasn't able to see any visual change in how the plates contact the back of the bucket. It appears to be purely a little cosmetic issue.
I tried using a 4LB. sledge hammer with a piece of wood to blunt the blow but that didn't budge it, and its hard to swing the hammer at the right angle. I came up with another idea I haven't tried yet but I think it will work - Put one of my big heavy duty ratchet straps around it, and around a big pine tree, lock the brakes down on the tractor and drop the disc into the ground and start ratcheting on the bar slowly. I think this would probably work, at least in theory. I could perhaps even put a length of 2x4 on the back end of the bar that will take the force of the ratchet strap, and distribute the weight along the full bar once it straightens out. One thing I don't want to do is make it worse than it is, by somehow exerting too much force and bending it the other way and further weakening it. Yes I know its very minor, but Its my brand new tractor and I hate seeing that bent bar! From what I can tell the bend is not causing any shift in angle on the quick attach plates. I can still attach my bucket fine and wasn't able to see any visual change in how the plates contact the back of the bucket. It appears to be purely a little cosmetic issue.
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