I think you have hit on a significant cause of many rear rollover...people are expecting the load to come with them instead of remaining stationary therefore they are taken by surprise when the rollover starts and precious reaction time is eaten up. Unless you know for a fact that the tractor will spin out or the load will come with you, expect it to roll over backwards.
That may very well be the case, but if your pulling in tough conditions, I don't know of anyone who would be pulling in a higher gear.
That's the problem, most people here on TBN are just that, hobbyists, and as such often have less than adequate knowledge for the task at hand. That isn't a criticism of anyone, it is to be expected of anyone who hasn't had a mentor to learn from. Sometimes a learning curve is very steep.Generally, there is some knowledge about the task at hand and some thought about the size of the equipment vs the size of the task. Also, if you have more than hobby experience on a machine your reaction to what the machine is doing can be very quick.
That picture earlier in the thread was pretty misleading about taking 5 seconds to react. If your front end starts coming up its quite motivating to hit the clutch!
I'd say you probably shouldn't, sure would like other opinions on this.If you use a cross draw bar, and say your skidding a big log. Can you run the chain over the cross drawbar and then hook to the pulling drawbar. Then raise the hitch enough for the log butt to clear the ground. Is this effective or a waste of time.
I'd say you probably shouldn't, sure would like other opinions on this.
I'd say this would have he same effect as connecting the chain directly to the cross draw bar.
We had a guy here in Marlette roll a Farmall H over on himself. He hadn't been here long - moved from China with his sister and her husband. Anyway, he was trying to pull a heavy (too heavy) gravity box with a chain (?) and for whatever reason he took the chain off the draw bar and hooked it around the seat bracket. Well it rolled right over onto him in almost an instant. He was messed up pretty bad (head injuries) for awhile but is OK now. Best advice I've seen here other than hooking up low is to GO SLOW.
If you're suggesting that the geometry of having the draw bar connection below the rear axle - all by itself - precludes a rear rollover, you are wrong. There are other geometric possibilities that come into play, but what you state isn't automatically true.
xtn