fire72
Bronze Member
This morning I took my 8N about 150 yards downhill from my house to retrieve my Gator, which I had gotten stuck in snow too deep for it. My 8N doesn't have a drawbar, so I rigged the tow strap to my 6' back blade. Had a complete brain fart and forgot to consider the height of the rigging in relation to the rear axle. Can anyone see the punch line coming? At an especially steep spot just below the house, the front wheels came up on me. The tires were about 4' off the ground before I could kick the clutch in and get the front end back down. After a brief pause to change my shorts, I re-rigged and finished the tow without incident.
The moral of the story? There isn't just one. Tow from the drawbar unless it's totally impossible to do so. That's what it's there for. Pay attention to what you're doing. I've been operating tractors on steep hills for years, but still made a dumb mistake by neglecting to check a very basic safety factor. All it took to correct the towing height was dropping the blade below the height of the axle.
With no ROPS and no seat belt on an 8N, I got away with my mistake by a combination of quick reflexes and sheer dumb luck. Many others haven't; back flips are frequently fatal. Be careful out there.
The moral of the story? There isn't just one. Tow from the drawbar unless it's totally impossible to do so. That's what it's there for. Pay attention to what you're doing. I've been operating tractors on steep hills for years, but still made a dumb mistake by neglecting to check a very basic safety factor. All it took to correct the towing height was dropping the blade below the height of the axle.
With no ROPS and no seat belt on an 8N, I got away with my mistake by a combination of quick reflexes and sheer dumb luck. Many others haven't; back flips are frequently fatal. Be careful out there.