Rear Ballast for Loader Work

   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #11  
I chose to put my effort and funds into a heavy implement. At least I can use it for other purposes. I'm not sure of the value of a ballast box that only serves one purpose.
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #12  
I chose to put my effort and funds into a heavy implement. At least I can use it for other purposes. I'm not sure of the value of a ballast box that only serves one purpose.

Yep, same I have a really heavy 85 inch tiller ~1500lb but usually like to run with an old Gannon Box blade that is a bit over 1000lbs. It tucks in fairly tight and at 76 inches isn't any wider than the rear tires. Also run a full set of 6 1/2 diameter factory weights per rear wheel
Broken a few chains and several 10K rated straps pulling at idle speed.

I had a full set of used weights as well plus some rail road rail.

I do use those on the tandem disc- sure bites in quicker
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #13  
Some implements aren’t to bad, for example a tiller, it sits fairly close to the machine. A couple things wrong with an implement as ballast, it might not be heavy enough. It also might stick out back a long ways, like a brush hog, and get in the way in tight areas. Also you stand a chance of damaging an implement. Something like a box blade or rear blade, probably not an issue. Something like a brush mower or tiller is back there bouncing around and if you back into something you might damage it.

A heavy hitch is probably the best, it sits closer to the tractor but it also expensive to buy the weights for one.
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #14  
My brother in law uses this quick hitch on the 3pt of his Kubota BX2380:


He backs up and uses it to grab the bar of an old barbell set with 400# of weights attached. Quick & easy to attach and cost less than $150. It also was a second use for his old weight set.

It isn't much ballast but it's all he needs for the light FEL work he does with the little BX.
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #15  
Do yourself a favor and get a ballast box. It has more weight in it and I don’t have to keep looking back to see if one of my weights is about to fall off.
Like Dave says.

In fact, I bought what I am sure is the exact same ballast box that Dave shows in his photo (every little detail matches). I had some big chunks of steel left over from an industrial machine build (and these things were huge, rectangles cut from 3" thick plate). I lowered them into the box and positioned them symmetrically, and then threw in a bunch of old chain and rebar and big messed up bolts and other steel. Then I poured concrete in there, and finally about half an inch of pourable self-leveling concrete (after leveling the box carefully) followed by some FlexSeal rubber so rain couldn't get between the concrete and the box steel. I carefully got it up to 800 lbs total, which is what the box was rated for. I usually store wheel chocks in the shallow tray space left after the pours. And I put a bar across the top, with an eye nut, so I can lift the whole thing with a hoist to mount it.

Now I think of myself as the person who has a perfect ballast box. On that particular small slice of what makes life great, I'm doing ok.
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #16  
I have a bunch of random stuff in my ballast box, weight lifting weights, old brake rotors and sometimes a couple of suitcase weights.
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #17  
He backs up and uses it to grab the bar of an old barbell set with 400# of weights attached. Quick & easy to attach and cost less than $150. It also was a second use for his old weight set.

I get what you're saying but, if you posted a pic of this, i think it would make the rounds of the tractor forums and end up being brought up periodically, forever! It's kind of brilliant in a comical way. Everybody knows about using weight plates.. but what about.. on the bar? And picking it up with a quick hitch? BRILLIANT lol
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #18  
I get what you're saying but, if you posted a pic of this, i think it would make the rounds of the tractor forums and end up being brought up periodically, forever! It's kind of brilliant in a comical way. Everybody knows about using weight plates.. but what about.. on the bar? And picking it up with a quick hitch? BRILLIANT lol

Here's a pic of a similar setup except using concrete disks instead of barbell weights:

Tractor-Concrete-Ballast.jpg
 
   / Rear Ballast for Loader Work #20  
Wow, i like that one too.. I could come up with a form for that pretty dang easily. I just love the idea of picking it up and putting it down so easily. I mean, a ballast box can be quick hitch compatible too but with these ideas you just need two bars out the ends, roughly in plane and parallel, which is even easier than fabbing the 3 mounts for real 3pt engagement and then making sure the thing actually sits correctly on the ground when you unhook. You can put features on one of those to stop it from actually rolling away but it doesn't matter what angle it sits at for you to pick it up.
 

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