boustany
Platinum Member
I'm sure the Kubota dealer thinks it a feature, but the relief valve protects the boom from being damaged while using the hoe. At least thats the way it should work - there is no way the boom hydraulics can damage the hoe. In reverse (i.e. backing into a solid object) the boom would tuck in and you'd have to bend a lot of metal to damage it. Pin or no pin, if you could damage it, you would.
The transport pins and lock are supposed to be a safety feature, not a shear pin. My link was damaged all to easily, and the pin came out a year and a half later for no particular reason. I can't imagine what would happen if the tractor was being transported and the pin popped out. It could be catastrophic.
In my machine as the pin pulled out it bent the base of hoe a bit. If it had been reinforced properly that shouldn't of happened.
I had a Case backhoe with a honking 1" transport pin. It was not a shear pin. It didn't have a link, but the clasp for it was shaped so it would sort of play if you backed into something. If I can figure out how to do it, I'll modify my link with an oval hole or something to have the same effect.
The transport pins and lock are supposed to be a safety feature, not a shear pin. My link was damaged all to easily, and the pin came out a year and a half later for no particular reason. I can't imagine what would happen if the tractor was being transported and the pin popped out. It could be catastrophic.
In my machine as the pin pulled out it bent the base of hoe a bit. If it had been reinforced properly that shouldn't of happened.
I had a Case backhoe with a honking 1" transport pin. It was not a shear pin. It didn't have a link, but the clasp for it was shaped so it would sort of play if you backed into something. If I can figure out how to do it, I'll modify my link with an oval hole or something to have the same effect.