workinonit
Elite Member
I'll take some pics of mine tomorrow. I had never seen any like them but I'm sure there are. They don't have nuts to lock them they are pinned. And the also slide and pin. Wish I had had them on my old 5310.
Make sure you adjust these so that they check motion by going into tension, not compression. A lot of folks overlook that part.
Those turnbuckles have a nut to lock the position on the right hand threads, correct?
Geez I hate having to word my posts without the use of contractions.![]()
As a newbie, I am one of the folks who is overlooking that part. Could you please explain to me how one makes the appropriate adjustments.
Thanks
Ken
Same here I just centered the attachment with the turnbuckles and take up the slack, Made sure the jam nut was tight....
Same here and never an issue .Must be I've been flirting with trouble all these years. I just find a set of holes that give the position and slop or tightness I want and go to work. Never was aware of compression being a problem ????
The reason I made that video a couple years ago is because there had been a string of threads about people breaking their stabilizers, and it was obvious the damage was caused by putting the stabilizer in compression. When properly adjusted, they should never experience compression, and that type of damage wouldn't even be possible. I am sure there are other ways to damage them though.
If you look up the specs of a turnbuckle in a mechanical design handbook or catalog, you will see they are almost always rated for tension load only. If a compression rating is given, it's much much lower (order of magnitude lower). The shape is very strong in tension, but in compression they have very little resistance to buckling.
Not sure I understand the concept of getting a turnbuckle with chain loops involved into compression. I have had a set the only had 1 loop in the mix and they were replaced as quickly as I could order different set.
On a side note, nothing about the 3PH was designed with work being done in reverse. Can it be done, sure and mist of us probably have on more than one occasion, but you are taking a system designed to be used in a pulling manner and using it to push. And many of us have broken pieces in doing so.
Note there is no implement for a tractor intended to function as a bulldozer.
Plenty of posts on here about people bending the 3-pt lift arms by pushing backwards (box blade, etc) and that will usually mangle the stabilizers too. But the stabilizers can buckle from forward or side loads if it puts them into compression. I personally think it would be hard to do, but folks manage to do it somehow.