I see this kinda stuff fairly often. Honestly it's easy to do, I am guilty too-but I don't blame the tractor when bad stuff happens. Not usually anyway.
The BX is engineered pretty well for what it was designed for. It was designed to be a big lawn mower, not a dozer. It's not a "real tractor" by any means. It has a frame, like a car. Everything is stuck between those frame rails. Because it was designed to be basically a lawn mower, it doesn't have skid plates. It's loader doesn't pick up round bales. The belly mower won't bush hog 3' tall grass. The B series is similar in it's basic design, so to get a real tractor, you'd have to step into an L series. Just look at how the tractor's built. If it has frame rails, like a truck does, then it's just a big mower that just happens to have a loader and a 3 point hitch.
Similar to needing to loosen a 1" nut. Your tool box has a 1" wrench, but it's in a bottom drawer, and right there in plain sight is a 12" crescent and it'll fit. But it's still not the right tool for the job, and honestly, using the wrong tool leads to headaches or worse.
When I said I have experience in this area, I bought a MF 1140 tractor. Neighbor guy wanted to clear some of his back lot off so we cut the trees and I tried to skid the trees out with my little 30hp tractor. A clutch later ($1500) and 1 rear tire, 1 front tire, getting stuck often, then pulled out, I told him I'm done. At first I blamed the tractor for being a poor design, and it kinda is in a way, for what I was using it for, but I was asking it to be a log skidder and that is not what it is. He called in a logging guy with a skidder and feller-buncher and had it done in a couple hours, and they paid him for the timber. All I had to do was bush hog.
The BX is engineered pretty well for what it was designed for. It was designed to be a big lawn mower, not a dozer. It's not a "real tractor" by any means. It has a frame, like a car. Everything is stuck between those frame rails. Because it was designed to be basically a lawn mower, it doesn't have skid plates. It's loader doesn't pick up round bales. The belly mower won't bush hog 3' tall grass. The B series is similar in it's basic design, so to get a real tractor, you'd have to step into an L series. Just look at how the tractor's built. If it has frame rails, like a truck does, then it's just a big mower that just happens to have a loader and a 3 point hitch.
Similar to needing to loosen a 1" nut. Your tool box has a 1" wrench, but it's in a bottom drawer, and right there in plain sight is a 12" crescent and it'll fit. But it's still not the right tool for the job, and honestly, using the wrong tool leads to headaches or worse.
When I said I have experience in this area, I bought a MF 1140 tractor. Neighbor guy wanted to clear some of his back lot off so we cut the trees and I tried to skid the trees out with my little 30hp tractor. A clutch later ($1500) and 1 rear tire, 1 front tire, getting stuck often, then pulled out, I told him I'm done. At first I blamed the tractor for being a poor design, and it kinda is in a way, for what I was using it for, but I was asking it to be a log skidder and that is not what it is. He called in a logging guy with a skidder and feller-buncher and had it done in a couple hours, and they paid him for the timber. All I had to do was bush hog.