kennyd
Advertiser
Nice work so far Lenny :thumbsup:
Thanks on the info about the wheel spacing. That back hill showing in one of the photos is an honest 30 degree slope. I've had trouble mowing it with a rider and ZTR with wife actually managing to turn the rider over on it once. I had asked the dealer to move the tires out before delivery but they only moved them to the normal centered position. I've been debating moving them but hesitating knowing that wheels are weighted and I work alone.
I did a quick test to see where the realistic limits were with the current setup.
I parked the tractor ROPS up on the side hill sideways on the steepest part that always has scared us with the bucket hovering over the ground. I then got off (if anyone does this, please don't be a d****ss like me and park where you get off on the downhill side. We had a moment there.)
I then gently pushed on the ROPS on the uphill side and watched the tire lift easily off the ground with just a little force. So it was close to the balance point.
Then, I took my IPhone, set it on angle finder mode and laid it flat on the transmission floorboard. It read 30 degrees. So now I plan to build up any of the yard I have to be on to less than 30 degrees.View attachment 452998
I removed the filled R4 from my tractor. The key to success is very accurate jacking height so the lug bolts line up without lifting anything. The R4s stand up themselves. It might be harder with R1s.
One thing to do, if you haven't already, is to widen your rear tires. No parts needed, just a floor jack, a couple of jack stands, and ideally a buddy.
You'll notice in your owners manual that you need weight on the three point hitch for loader work. I'm guessing here, but somewhere around 800-1000 lbs should be what you want for your 3301. This will help keep the rear tires on the ground and keep you safer. Widening the rear tire spacing coupled with this ballast will help keep your tractor upright, which is of the utmost importance.
I have to keep mine at a set width for vegetable production, about 53" from center to center of the tread on my 13.6-28s. However, during the winter, I can widen them up. I just did that this week and went from 53" to 64". The stability increase is incredible. Unless you need them close in for some reason, move them all the way out. You probably have to swap them side to side to do it, but it'd worth it. Just be careful, they're heavy!
You have nothing to apologize for at all. That is a very nice place. You are concerned about handling large weighted rear tires, and rightly so. Here is what I did as a reference. Other, more manly men seem to think handling 1000ln wheels is no big deal, but I know the laws of gravity well enough:
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/build-yourself/278997-how-lift-filled-rear-tires.html?highlight=