WALT
Gold Member
I thought I would share with the group an incident that happened to me, and how to prevent future occurences.
When plowing my 450' driveway, I use a combination of the loader and my Woods LR106 6' rake with graderblade down.
I set the wheels to keep the blade 1" off the gravel.
The end of my drive, where the snow is pushed, is an approx. 70' drop to a brook, at a 60 degree angle. While dragging the snow with the rear blade near the edge, I moved the 3 point lever to raise the rear blade. Due to the large gloves I had on, I also knocked the transmission from low range to neutral.
The tractor rolled forward towards the abyss 2' until I realized what was happening and slammed on the brake. I had about 4' left before going over the edge. After identifiing my stupid error, I was much more careful completing the job.
I am not new to tractors or operating machinery, (650 hrs on the BX 2200) but as has been posted before, a few seconds of inattention can get you mentioned in this forum.
After some thought, I decided to somehow secure the transmission lever from being knocked into neutral again.
The solution was to make a T-shaped insert, that drops into the lever slot, easily removed, that secures the lever in high or low range. Using 1/2" plywood, the piece that drops in the slot is 7" long by 3" wide. A 1 1/2"
wide piece screwed on top keeps the insert from falling down.
Adjust the sizes to fit your tractor.
Hope this prevents any of you repeating my seat stainer.
HAPPY TRACTORING
WALT
When plowing my 450' driveway, I use a combination of the loader and my Woods LR106 6' rake with graderblade down.
I set the wheels to keep the blade 1" off the gravel.
The end of my drive, where the snow is pushed, is an approx. 70' drop to a brook, at a 60 degree angle. While dragging the snow with the rear blade near the edge, I moved the 3 point lever to raise the rear blade. Due to the large gloves I had on, I also knocked the transmission from low range to neutral.
The tractor rolled forward towards the abyss 2' until I realized what was happening and slammed on the brake. I had about 4' left before going over the edge. After identifiing my stupid error, I was much more careful completing the job.
I am not new to tractors or operating machinery, (650 hrs on the BX 2200) but as has been posted before, a few seconds of inattention can get you mentioned in this forum.
After some thought, I decided to somehow secure the transmission lever from being knocked into neutral again.
The solution was to make a T-shaped insert, that drops into the lever slot, easily removed, that secures the lever in high or low range. Using 1/2" plywood, the piece that drops in the slot is 7" long by 3" wide. A 1 1/2"
wide piece screwed on top keeps the insert from falling down.
Adjust the sizes to fit your tractor.
Hope this prevents any of you repeating my seat stainer.
HAPPY TRACTORING
WALT