But now for the hard part. It would not go as it was so we cranked it up long enough to lower the bucket and shoveled the dirt out of the bucket.
View attachment 52552
John Deere, two blocks, and the cable attached to the chain that went through the tire and around the axle. It rolled back over very gently.
Don’t mean to be overly-critical... but there appears to be TWO things questionable in this thread.
The earlier post by the OP was “unless the ROPs are down do NOT put on a seat belt”...which I read to be stated exactly Wrong. For protection, IF the ROPs are down do not put on a seat belt. If the ROPs are UP ...WEAR that seatbelt.
The SECOND suggestion I’d make is NOT to pull anything heavy as the picture shows because:
1-It is being pulled via the 3-pt hitch from a point higher than the rear axle... which can pull the green tractor OVER on top of the operator.
2-A cable is being used which, should it snap, can act as a WHIP and come back and CUT the operator...perhaps even FATALLY. A cable should be weighted with a heavy tarp or carpet etc to prevent that.
3- (And THIS suggestion pretty well addresses the first two): The green tractor should have the cable run BENEATH the green tractor and it should be pulling the load with the green tractor in REVERSE. This will place the front of the green tractor between the operator and the load, and a broken/snapped cable will be less likely to strike the operator, and the green tractor can not be overturned onto the operator because the cable would be BENEATH the tractor.