Operating loader without rear ballast

   / Operating loader without rear ballast #61  
So if I agree to purchase one of these ballast boxes that I dont need in-order for the dealer to agree to sell me the tractor.....is he going to be there ever second to make sure I have it on when using the FEL??
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #63  
That is why they will sell you tractor with loaded tires.

Still sounds like bad practice IMO. I believe someone said EITHER loaded tires OR a ballast box. Which dont make much sense like I said in my previous post.

I do believe that there are dealers out there that do that, but not my local dealers. And if they did try to force me to pay extra for a box or ballast, they would for sure lose my sale. And I would make it clear to them that THATS why.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #64  
I do believe that there are dealers out there that do that, but not my local dealers. And if they did try to force me to pay extra for a box or ballast, they would for sure lose my sale. And I would make it clear to them that THATS why.

Especially because they charge out the wazoo for a ballast box, and you can get a MUCH cheaper one used or make it yourself out of a 55 gallon drum.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #65  
So if I agree to purchase one of these ballast boxes that I dont need in-order for the dealer to agree to sell me the tractor.....is he going to be there ever second to make sure I have it on when using the FEL??

I'm guessing they can wash their hands with it as soon as they drop the tractor off.

Side note on my recent trade.

I went from a JD 4320 to this 3720. So I told the dealer that I didn't need the BB as I already have one (from the 4320 ). Well, as I'm going over the tractor checking the tire air pressure I get this liquid comming out of the valve stem (not happy). Sure enough, tires are filled with rim guard. It appears they will not let a tractor off their lot without a BB or tires filled.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #66  
I'm guessing they can wash their hands with it as soon as they drop the tractor off.

Side note on my recent trade.

I went from a JD 4320 to this 3720. So I told the dealer that I didn't need the BB as I already have one (from the 4320 ). Well, as I'm going over the tractor checking the tire air pressure I get this liquid comming out of the valve stem (not happy). Sure enough, tires are filled with rim guard. It appears they will not let a tractor off their lot without a BB or tires filled.

Was that something that was ALREADY in there before you started looking at the tractor?? Or was that something they snuck in on you after you said you didnt need a ballast box?

Something like that would have been enough for me to just walk away. Putting in rimguard, and charging me for it, without my requesting it.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #67  
I have used FELs many times without juiced tires or ballast, it is not ideal and takes way more time, but puts some excitement in your day. Not so bad with 4wd machine. Just plan ahead. Don't load heaping buckets of heavy material, drive with bucket as low as possible, avoid sharp turns. If loading truck prep a level or upward slope towards truck, and lift bucket as close to dump body as possible so you can push bucket against truck if it starts tipping. It can be fun driving from material to truck with one back tire 3ft. in air. Would I work a machine like this- no, but sometimes when all the other machines are on jobs you have to use whats there. My dads tractor has juiced tires and is super stable, you can even sidehill with bucket high(which I never do). The power rake tractor has no juice to stay light over fresh septic installs and while stable does hike a tire when moving heavy material.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #68  
My grandfather use to run a giant concrete block sometimes( might have been drawbar put inside wodden form with chain going to toplink mount). Easy to make just to have for certain situations.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #69  
My loader manual (JD 553 loader on a 5045E tractor) list three options for ballast at two levels of use. Ordinary and heavy. Heavy use is digging and loading heavy materials like wet manure or gravel and dealing with high loads. Things less heavy such as snow or sawdust come under regular use. The three options have a table for the tires specific to your machine and are 1. light ballast box, 2. heavy ballast box, and 3. liquid filled tires with up to four wheel weights per side. For my tractor and tires the table says I need 1025 lbs per rear tire and in the tractor manual I find that the beet juice weights 467 lbs. per tire filled to 75%. But I can't find what the empty tire and rim weigh? I'm guesstimating about 450lbs from past experience trying to load a flat one onto a pickup without a working loader and I have about 200 lbs of ice chains on each tire so I think I'm all set. It certainly behaves well loading snow or cord wood but If I read the chart right I still should add 2000 lbs on the 3PH when digging or loading out a manure pile just to save wear on the front X.
 
   / Operating loader without rear ballast #70  
When thinking about rear ballast, implements on the 3ph that run on the ground--box blade, mowers, etc.--are not (not) ballast when lowered. If on a downhill the rears become unweighted, although it may seem counter-intuitive, raising the 3ph is part of the solution ...and, yes, 4wd (if so equipped) should have been engaged, in which case, engine braking is usually all that is required...no need to use the brakes.
 

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