MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 57,990
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
You can see that the forks are pre-bent to the correct angle for the plate and there is a 90 degree vertical plate at the back of the forks that provide both a stop for loads AND support for the forks to keep them from bending.
You are correct that the QA male plate on the FEL arms tilt farther forward than backwards... when the FEL arms are all the way down.
When the FEL arms are all the way up, you can flip dirt or logs or whatever right off the bucket or forks and into your lap if you are not careful.
This is because the QA plate is not auto-leveling. That would require a parallel linkage configuration that would ad cost to the FEL. So if you start off with the forks parallel to the ground, as you lift the FEL arms, that angle changes unless you manually dump or curl with the joystick.
You are correct that the QA male plate on the FEL arms tilt farther forward than backwards... when the FEL arms are all the way down.
When the FEL arms are all the way up, you can flip dirt or logs or whatever right off the bucket or forks and into your lap if you are not careful.
This is because the QA plate is not auto-leveling. That would require a parallel linkage configuration that would ad cost to the FEL. So if you start off with the forks parallel to the ground, as you lift the FEL arms, that angle changes unless you manually dump or curl with the joystick.