3 pt hitch Disgust
Wen, in your comment about just removing the arms off the pins...
He may only have the BX to use has his 3pt example. If I didn't have another tractor here that has been used with 3pt implements, (Ford 1710) I would be extremely frustrated with it as well.
On the Ford you just slip the arms off easy as pie. Quick, easy, no fuss no muss, like you said, minutes.
On the BX you CAN'T spread the arms out to get them off outward facing pins, even with the chains off. I cannot spread the link off of the pin. (I threw out the goofball cotters and just put little finger snap locks (my term) in them for speed) I have to pull the safety pin then force the implement sideways out of the arm. It is completely bizarre. The BX may meet the legal requirements of being a Cat 1 but in all seriousness, I would love to have the designer(s) time for a day. I would like to see them put this Cat 1 rake on and off this BX over and over and over and over. And they can put on their "upgrade" which I do not think is going to solve the problem.
And as another fellow posted, why can't the arms of the B75 or
B2410 be used? I wonder, it would probably be closer than the link arms off of my Ford or
L35 which I am probably going to try.
There are a dealers reading this forum (quietly, lurking in the background) I would like to address each of them and ask that they go out and check this for themselves. I would also humbly suggest that if they are telling people this is a CAT 1 hitch they might want to consider taking cover when the buyer gets a belly full of dealing with it.
As I mentioned, it probably is LEGALLY a three point hitch but it is a huge problem compared to a "typical" 3pt. As I mentioned in another post, when the links are attached to an implement the lower arms are completely spread to the point that the sockets are at the extreme maximum of movement, rendering them worthless as a pivot. If I didn't have a backhoe here with a chain hook on it to hold up implements and move them around I don't know what I'd do.
And I don't agree with the other fellows suggestion to use Cat 0 implements. No offense meant, but the CAT 0 implements I have seen are designed for 2WD garden tractors and would probably bend in half if they caught on a rock even with the BX pulling them. The whole business of using a CAT 1 implement IS being able to have the advantage of using them between different tractors, and also having the benefit of finding them anywhere.
del
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