CurlyDave
Elite Member
I don't know whether this belongs in Safety or Attachments, possibly a moderator could help me.
But, I need to bring everyone's attention to a serious safety issue with Payne's Clamp On Hitch Receivers.
I have one of these and use it on the 4-n-1 bucket on my John Deere TLB 110, which has the bolt-on wear edge. I use it to move and position my 16' enclosed trailer, which has an empty weight of ~2270 lbs.
No matter how tightly I jam the receiver against the bucket edge (it appears to me to fit as designed) I have two problems:
1. Any attempt to steer the trailer puts a side force on the hitch, which easily causes it to swivel, so that it is no longer perpendicular to the bucket edge. I have tried tightening the clamping bolt with all my strength, and placing one side of the receiver against one of the bolts in the bucket edge, but nothing helps the situation.
2. Last week I tried to position the trailer facing downhill on about a 15% grade. Obviously this meant that the trailer was pushing against the ball, and therefore the receiver. Well, the force caused the clamping bolt to unscrew, and the receiver swiveled completely against the bucket edge. It loosened sufficiently that I was afraid it would fall off the bucket. This was clearly a very unsafe situation as the only thing which prevented the trailer from rolling down my 1000' long, 15% slope driveway was the fact that it ran into the bucket of my backhoe.
The thing that caused a lot of pucker factor was that in order to get out of the situation, I had to chock the wheels of the trailer, and then get in between the trailer and the backhoe in order to get the trailer unhitched from the ball in the receiver.
No matter how well you chock the wheels and lower the tongue jack, standing in between a 2300 lb trailer, which wants to roll downhill, and an 8000 lb backhoe, with its parking brake fully engaged and stabilizers down, gets my full attention. The steel edges of that bucket look very hard and cruel compared to my frail human body. And the front of the trailer looks like a most unkind pusher.
Other than "don't use the clamp on receiver" does anyone have any ideas on how to prevent this situation from developing?
I sent an email to Payne's tonight and will post whatever reply I get.
To see one of these gadgets look here: Clamp On Hitch Receiver
But, I need to bring everyone's attention to a serious safety issue with Payne's Clamp On Hitch Receivers.
I have one of these and use it on the 4-n-1 bucket on my John Deere TLB 110, which has the bolt-on wear edge. I use it to move and position my 16' enclosed trailer, which has an empty weight of ~2270 lbs.
No matter how tightly I jam the receiver against the bucket edge (it appears to me to fit as designed) I have two problems:
1. Any attempt to steer the trailer puts a side force on the hitch, which easily causes it to swivel, so that it is no longer perpendicular to the bucket edge. I have tried tightening the clamping bolt with all my strength, and placing one side of the receiver against one of the bolts in the bucket edge, but nothing helps the situation.
2. Last week I tried to position the trailer facing downhill on about a 15% grade. Obviously this meant that the trailer was pushing against the ball, and therefore the receiver. Well, the force caused the clamping bolt to unscrew, and the receiver swiveled completely against the bucket edge. It loosened sufficiently that I was afraid it would fall off the bucket. This was clearly a very unsafe situation as the only thing which prevented the trailer from rolling down my 1000' long, 15% slope driveway was the fact that it ran into the bucket of my backhoe.
The thing that caused a lot of pucker factor was that in order to get out of the situation, I had to chock the wheels of the trailer, and then get in between the trailer and the backhoe in order to get the trailer unhitched from the ball in the receiver.
No matter how well you chock the wheels and lower the tongue jack, standing in between a 2300 lb trailer, which wants to roll downhill, and an 8000 lb backhoe, with its parking brake fully engaged and stabilizers down, gets my full attention. The steel edges of that bucket look very hard and cruel compared to my frail human body. And the front of the trailer looks like a most unkind pusher.
Other than "don't use the clamp on receiver" does anyone have any ideas on how to prevent this situation from developing?
I sent an email to Payne's tonight and will post whatever reply I get.
To see one of these gadgets look here: Clamp On Hitch Receiver