just picked up a 2301 from the dealer over a week ago and love the tractor
primary use for me is snow removal so a PTO rear blower is eventually going on it
reading on the tractor I found some threads in here talking about how weak the front end 4wd is
one thread talking about not using chains on the front end because its to weak to handle it in the long run, another thread mentioning taking it out of 4wd on asphalt because it could break gears
with my old yanmar the only useful attachment I had was a box scraper, so that was first thing that went on the Kubota
pushing snow around I have been backing into snow piles as I lift the box ramping them up, the front axle doing most of the pushing in this instance, so I am assuming I shouldn't do this anymore?
I guess I am also skipping chains on the front end, what does break and how easy is it to fix if I needed to?
and I would assume such a fix is not covered under my warranty?
next question is the diff lock, I used it for the first time yesterday messing around and it seemed to get stuck, I was spinning a rear tire on wet asphalt while doing a tight turn and realized it was still locked, pulled straight engaged and disengaged and it seemed to pop out, is it normal for these things to be sticky new? I realize its a pin design and my old yanmar had a diff lock as well
and does anyone have any experience running a 50" blower on the rear of one of these machines? I bought the tractor as a upgrade to my Honda walk behind, I take care of a few homes other than mine and with the tractor speeding up the process I can add a few more for next year
but I am an odd ball here in lake Tahoe, its either walk behinds, skid steers with blowers or large loaders doing the work, the basic skip loader serves my purpose so I went with it but I am also not a normal contractor, the tractor is mostly for home use with snow clearing as a way to raise funds for it
also the front end loader, I have a lot of experience operating a big case skid steer at the tree company as well as a toro dingo, we abuse the hell out of these things and do a lot of work with the FEL on both machines that are border line abuse
just how strong is the FEL on my tractor compared to these? I baby my own personal stuff but at the same time I am not in that time is money crunch contractors are.
primary use for me is snow removal so a PTO rear blower is eventually going on it
reading on the tractor I found some threads in here talking about how weak the front end 4wd is
one thread talking about not using chains on the front end because its to weak to handle it in the long run, another thread mentioning taking it out of 4wd on asphalt because it could break gears
with my old yanmar the only useful attachment I had was a box scraper, so that was first thing that went on the Kubota
pushing snow around I have been backing into snow piles as I lift the box ramping them up, the front axle doing most of the pushing in this instance, so I am assuming I shouldn't do this anymore?
I guess I am also skipping chains on the front end, what does break and how easy is it to fix if I needed to?
and I would assume such a fix is not covered under my warranty?
next question is the diff lock, I used it for the first time yesterday messing around and it seemed to get stuck, I was spinning a rear tire on wet asphalt while doing a tight turn and realized it was still locked, pulled straight engaged and disengaged and it seemed to pop out, is it normal for these things to be sticky new? I realize its a pin design and my old yanmar had a diff lock as well
and does anyone have any experience running a 50" blower on the rear of one of these machines? I bought the tractor as a upgrade to my Honda walk behind, I take care of a few homes other than mine and with the tractor speeding up the process I can add a few more for next year
but I am an odd ball here in lake Tahoe, its either walk behinds, skid steers with blowers or large loaders doing the work, the basic skip loader serves my purpose so I went with it but I am also not a normal contractor, the tractor is mostly for home use with snow clearing as a way to raise funds for it
also the front end loader, I have a lot of experience operating a big case skid steer at the tree company as well as a toro dingo, we abuse the hell out of these things and do a lot of work with the FEL on both machines that are border line abuse
just how strong is the FEL on my tractor compared to these? I baby my own personal stuff but at the same time I am not in that time is money crunch contractors are.