Think ‘As slow as possible and as fast as necessary.’ You can always make extra trips…If you ‘feel’ it going wrong you can always drop the load…better to push the loader stick all the way forward and drop it that the alternative.
I have a backhoe on my LX2610. I also have beet juice in the tires. I use a grapple and work it pretty hard. I have never needed more ballast on the back. I keep telling myself that if I ever need more ballast I could extend the backhoe bucket to increase the leverage, but that has never been necessary.
Ballast on the back will make little or no difference with sideways stability.
thank you I think the back hoe may help due to the extra weight. I was worried that the backhoe would be mostly above the center of gravity and could make it more tippyI have a backhoe on my LX2610. I also have beet juice in the tires. I use a grapple and work it pretty hard. I have never needed more ballast on the back. I keep telling myself that if I ever need more ballast I could extend the backhoe bucket to increase the leverage, but that has never been necessary.
Ballast on the back will make little or no difference with sideways stability.
thank you the wheels are not adjustable and reading the manual wheel spacers are not to be used with the backhoeSounds like from your description that you should have the load more centered when you are using the grapple. Low ballast in the rear will help as well. If your wheels are adjustable and not at the furthest position, do that to add stability as well.
ironically it was a fairly light load just spruce branches I think being in the hole is what caused the issue and I did drop the grapple and realigned. I do have R1 tires with studded chains loaded. and I had a back blade on the tractor for ballast. I was going pretty slow i keep it safe I am just concerned because much of my land is very uneven. I am not suppose to use wheel spacers with the back hoe.Jday - - - What are you doing with the grapple to cause this?
Sounds like lifting/pulling/pushing some pretty heavy stuff...trees or logs?
Not only are you potentially causing injury to yourself, but the tractor's loader framework too.
Where I would start is (1) slowing down/less aggressive, and (2) be considerate of how the load in the grapple is "centered" in the grapple, and (3) increasing width and weight by spacers or adjusting tire mounting, loading tires and using a rear ballast.
What type tires/wheels do you have on the rear? Some R1's can be mounted different ways to adjust width without using spacers. Several different options may exist.
(3) Loading tires and using ballast will NOT fix side-tipping, but may make things happen slower. Following (1) and (2) will/should be the first things to concentrate on.
thank you yes that is what i didThink ‘As slow as possible and as fast as necessary.’ You can always make extra trips…If you ‘feel’ it going wrong you can always drop the load…better to push the loader stick all the way forward and drop it that the alternative.
Your BH, when attached, without extending, will provide you more than enough additional rear ballast.I have a backhoe on my LX2610. I also have beet juice in the tires. I use a grapple and work it pretty hard. I have never needed more ballast on the back. I keep telling myself that if I ever need more ballast I could extend the backhoe bucket to increase the leverage, but that has never been necessary.
Ballast on the back will make little or no difference with sideways stability.
I have the tires on my 4701 set as wide as possible. Helps a lot. The other thing is, slow down. Keep the load in the grapple as low to the ground as you can. And slow down.....New l4701 for me with grapple. Would heavier tires or widening the tires work?
My guess is most here already slowed down. Glad you are joining us!Well hopefully this thread will slow everyone down some including me.
Personally I do not know. BUT I think it is wise to keep the ROPS up and wear the seat belt.Being a used tractor I don’t have a way to fold the rops up or down. The o Lu thing that came with it was a bolt and cotter pin, actually it’s a double bolt with cotter pins. Do they have a bolt or pin or something where you can easily fold the rops up and down instead of screwing it in and out?
Ballast down low on the back will help with sideways stability. To much of the backhoe is up high, which can actually make it worse.I have a backhoe on my LX2610. I also have beet juice in the tires. I use a grapple and work it pretty hard. I have never needed more ballast on the back. I keep telling myself that if I ever need more ballast I could extend the backhoe bucket to increase the leverage, but that has never been necessary.
Ballast on the back will make little or no difference with sideways stability.
that is what I was wondering I have a 6ft back blade on now so leaving that a foot off of the ground it may act a little as a stabilizer.Ballast down low on the back will help with sideways stability. To much of the backhoe is up high, which can actually make it worse.