hube2
Veteran Member
I have a Massey GC1725M. I think this is more general and not related to the make of tractor, but I could be wrong.
When I am using my rear blower and I encounter a rise in the the ground under the blower the blower will be pushed up but only to a point. After this point the arms will not raise further and instead the blower begins to dig into the ground. If it makes any difference I am blowing a stone driveway and areas of my lawn, so the ground is not completely hard and does give a bit. But I don't think this matters because the blower will be pushed up higher in the first place.
I also notice that when I'm attaching the blower what I do is lower the 3pt as low as it can go before backing up to the blower and then I lift the arms up to put the pins in. I can lift them pretty easily to a point and then I see significant resistance to further lifting and I can not lift them any further.
I have my 3pt slow control valve open only 1/4 of a turn to prevent the 450# blower from slamming into the ground when I lower it. I think I can get 2 full turns on it so it is only allowing about 1/8th of the flow that is possible.
I've never really studied how upward pressure from the ground effect 3pt level. I have been was under the impression that there is no downward pressure and that upward force should cause the 3pt to lift. I have actually gotten to the point where the blower is dug in enough that it practically prevents my from backing up and my wheels begin to spin or the tractor bogs down if I try to continue pushing, so I know there is a significant amount of pressure that is being applied that should force the blower higher.
Can the slow control valve being restricted prevent the blower from pushing the 3pt up when it encounters a large rise in ground level or is this just how the 3pt works, that is only allowing it to rise a set amount from where it is set?
What am I misunderstanding?
When I am using my rear blower and I encounter a rise in the the ground under the blower the blower will be pushed up but only to a point. After this point the arms will not raise further and instead the blower begins to dig into the ground. If it makes any difference I am blowing a stone driveway and areas of my lawn, so the ground is not completely hard and does give a bit. But I don't think this matters because the blower will be pushed up higher in the first place.
I also notice that when I'm attaching the blower what I do is lower the 3pt as low as it can go before backing up to the blower and then I lift the arms up to put the pins in. I can lift them pretty easily to a point and then I see significant resistance to further lifting and I can not lift them any further.
I have my 3pt slow control valve open only 1/4 of a turn to prevent the 450# blower from slamming into the ground when I lower it. I think I can get 2 full turns on it so it is only allowing about 1/8th of the flow that is possible.
I've never really studied how upward pressure from the ground effect 3pt level. I have been was under the impression that there is no downward pressure and that upward force should cause the 3pt to lift. I have actually gotten to the point where the blower is dug in enough that it practically prevents my from backing up and my wheels begin to spin or the tractor bogs down if I try to continue pushing, so I know there is a significant amount of pressure that is being applied that should force the blower higher.
Can the slow control valve being restricted prevent the blower from pushing the 3pt up when it encounters a large rise in ground level or is this just how the 3pt works, that is only allowing it to rise a set amount from where it is set?
What am I misunderstanding?