I was out on my B2601 yesterday (4.0 hours on it so far) and as I was getting out of the seat to use the backhoe, it quit. I sat back down, turned on the key to start and all I got was the lights on the panel. I went for some tools to start trouble shooting the switches and have a look at the wiring underneath, since I was in some rough terrain. Everything looked fine and then I noticed I must have moved the PTO control when unhooking my seat belt. As soon as I moved it back where it belonged, everything was fine. I don't plan on ever using the PTO since I don't have any use for either the front or rear one. I'm thinking to make a plate to lock the levers from moving again. Or, just bypassing the switch.
After reading a lot of the old posts and seeing the troubles the various safety switches cause from time to time, I may either bypass them all or make up a wiring diagram and add switches to bypass each one for trouble shooting purposes and having a way to limp back to the workshop instead of fooling around on the ground in 20 degree weather.
The only other complaint I have is I find the reverse pedal hard to operate. I put a larger rubber pedal on it that raises it up and is wider but I wish the spring had a bit less resistance. Just the ergonomics are a bit off for size 9 1/2 feet. Where they located the pivot point gives much more leverage to the forward pedal and half as much for the rear one. What were they thinking?
After reading a lot of the old posts and seeing the troubles the various safety switches cause from time to time, I may either bypass them all or make up a wiring diagram and add switches to bypass each one for trouble shooting purposes and having a way to limp back to the workshop instead of fooling around on the ground in 20 degree weather.
The only other complaint I have is I find the reverse pedal hard to operate. I put a larger rubber pedal on it that raises it up and is wider but I wish the spring had a bit less resistance. Just the ergonomics are a bit off for size 9 1/2 feet. Where they located the pivot point gives much more leverage to the forward pedal and half as much for the rear one. What were they thinking?