Re: PT-425 PROS & cons??
JJ,
People have been adding weight and making wider tractor wheel spacing likely as long as there have been tractors....
Adding 900-1000 pounds of weight to the back of a traditional CUT to offset the loader also puts additional stress on wheel/axle bearings, differentials, transmissions, brakes, etc -- but people have been doing it for decades. Hanging a backhoe off the back or FEL off the front has similar effects, all by themselves. Similarly, spreading the wheels farther apart also increases the stress. But, the manufacturers have even facilitated making the wheels farther apart, by offering wheels that "spin out" and lock down in new locations...
If every tractor, vehicle or machine left the factory in the "optimum" configuration for each individuals' needs, there would be no need for an aftermarket, nor any need for all the modifications that owners perform to them.... /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
IMO, the PT factory does what it does:
(1) to minimize the costs of warranty claims and repairs... and,
(2) to give satisfactory service with the existing size of attachments rated for these machines -- for example, if you reverse the wheels they're now wider than the buckets for the T-8 machines, the 48" brush cutter, 48" finish mower, etc.
I may put my wheels back in the stock configuration at some point, but for now I'm taking full advantage of having the wider stance... if my wheel motors get damaged, I'll deal with them then, and likely replace them with higher torque/lower speed versions at the same time....
BTW, <font color="red"> Fourteen </font> , it's great to have you back posting again -- you were missed! Hope your new "bionics" have solved any health issues... /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif