SimpleSimon
Silver Member
This is the reason my ROPS is down, and also no seatbelt. The land is flat here, but lots of trees! You could have been killed, but I'm glad you were not!!
Simon
Simon
I've done this. Thankfully, the one branch that was strong enough to not break when my ROPS caught it at speed, was high enough to not completely flip me over backwards. I did pop one hell of a wheelie at 11 mph, though... still not sure how I didn't break both front casters on the landing.We keep the ROPS down 100% of the time on our eXmark mowers because if a tree limb grabs the ROPS it'll flip you over in a split second. Extremely dangerous.
property is mostly gentle slope but i have hi-way frontage with a steep embankment to mow as well as a pond that i dig out when the water dries out in it, coupled with the huge PITA that folding that ROPS is i just leave it up, also i sometimes get carried away with pulling up trees with the FEL and it gets a little tipy. after this event i may re-think that.I don't remember Orange Grove as being very hilly. Is there a need for the rops?
MB cars had that tech back in the 80sI've done this. Thankfully, the one branch that was strong enough to not break when my ROPS caught it at speed, was high enough to not completely flip me over backwards. I did pop one hell of a wheelie at 11 mph, though... still not sure how I didn't break both front casters on the landing.
The second time I caught a branch was more like DaBear's situation, the branch clobbered me on the back and pinned me forward against the control levers of the zero turn. Left one heck of a road rash across my back, shoulder, neck, and side of my face.
I've never put the ROPS up on any machine since then, ever, for any reason. They are just flat-out dangerous, if you have trees. Terrible solution to a terrible problem, IMO.
Someday, someone will invent a retractable ROPS that fires upward like an airbag, when the machine detects rollover.
You might also ask how much replacement glass costs, and the availability of the glass in the future.shhh! still trying to talk the CFO into an AC cab.
ain't that the truth, but shhh the CFO is looking.You might also ask how much replacement glass costs, and the availability of the glass in the future.
It's important also that you DON'T wear your seatbelt with rops down.I have many little rolling hills, when carrying something heavy, rops up, set belt on.
When light and flat, rops down.
Rops has already saved me some head hits with falling branches and side swipes when the slope was muddy and I slid a bit.
With hills and rain gullies, the rops are required for me though in the woods.
It's a judgement call. I know plenty of people who have farmed on hills for their whole life without rops and still doing just fine.
no doubt, error #1 was leaving the limb in the first place. #2 not cutting it off on the several incidents where i hit it but no damage. #3 forgetting about it while cruising thru dragging the box blade.I call that operator error.
I have rops on a Ferris zero turn with a mounted TuffTop canopy ..... and then one day I "accidently" found the anchor cables on the power pole .............. that cost several hundred for a replacment.
Several years ago 20 closeno doubt, error #1 was leaving the limb in the first place. #2 not cutting it off on the several incidents where i hit it but no damage. #3 forgetting about it while cruising thru dragging the box blade.
I promptly fixed all of that on this one and any other limb that i could find. I have declared war on the Ninja trees.
I always hate it when those inanimate objects jump out and grab me.
yes the ROPS is there to snag tree limbs and drop them on me, i spent my youth mowing hay in the hills of East Texas, nothing will make your @$$ pucker better than going over the crest of a steep hill driving on a pile of cut grass with a sickle running in part of your exit path.Several years ago 20 close
Had a John Deere T model 40/ and a friend had retired needing to build a drive with box blade. and since I was traveling into Canada let him use the tractor. The next day after leaving the place received a call from his family that he had used the box blade and turning clockwise had run the rear tire up on a downed tree rolling the tractor. was found when the wife called him for lunch. had fallen under the tractor with the steering wheel on his neck. rescue came and had to lift the tractor to remove the body. Before ROPS and no belt.
ROPS and of course no belt either. Bad time to be traveling. Be careful the ROPS are there for a reason.
ken
When I got my 3033R, I did that head bang thing a few times, before realizing their was a "half-cocked" position into which I could lock the ROPS, which kept it just above head-knocking height.ROPS really should have a warning sticker on them:
CAUTION - Risk of concussion while changing implements under folded ROPS.
True, and they make a lot less noise from bouncing around when locked into that position too.When I got my 3033R, I did that head bang thing a few times, before realizing their was a "half-cocked" position into which I could lock the ROPS, which kept it just above head-knocking height.