MidgetMaestro
New member
Hi all -
About a year ago, our BX2200 3ph kept spontaneously lowering itself even when the control lever was up....after replacing tons of stuff, and ripping the whole tractor apart, we discovered that the culprit was a little teflon ring that had cracked/deteriorated around the main hydraulic ram. What a pain that was, taking the whole tractor apart for a $.90 o-ring!
Well to get at the ram, we had to remove the entire rear end including the notched hydraulic arms (that go directly into the hydraulics). My grandfather took these out, and put them back in, supposedly keeping track of the notch position. I don't think he put them back in correctly and here is why....
Our concrete pad is level so I used that as a base to take pictures:
The blade only raises about 5 1/2 inches off the ground, but can be manually (pulling the blade up by hand) raised by more than 13-15 inches.
I seem to recall the blade raising more than the 5 1/2 inches prior to the tear-down.
Can anyone confirm this?
Edit: I should add that the reason I am asking is there are several places on our property that the blade catches even when up because it is not high enough off the ground.
About a year ago, our BX2200 3ph kept spontaneously lowering itself even when the control lever was up....after replacing tons of stuff, and ripping the whole tractor apart, we discovered that the culprit was a little teflon ring that had cracked/deteriorated around the main hydraulic ram. What a pain that was, taking the whole tractor apart for a $.90 o-ring!
Well to get at the ram, we had to remove the entire rear end including the notched hydraulic arms (that go directly into the hydraulics). My grandfather took these out, and put them back in, supposedly keeping track of the notch position. I don't think he put them back in correctly and here is why....
Our concrete pad is level so I used that as a base to take pictures:



The blade only raises about 5 1/2 inches off the ground, but can be manually (pulling the blade up by hand) raised by more than 13-15 inches.
I seem to recall the blade raising more than the 5 1/2 inches prior to the tear-down.
Can anyone confirm this?
Edit: I should add that the reason I am asking is there are several places on our property that the blade catches even when up because it is not high enough off the ground.
Last edited: