That didn't bother him at all. That would have scared the crap out me if I had been on the dozer.I thought you'd go for new pants before loading because you already lost your load.![]()
I'm sure I'm not the only one here who's done the mad high-speed freewheeling down the hill on wet grass with a load in the bucket, when the rear tires got just light enough to lose traction. Heck, I know I'm not the first person to do it in my own back yard, the prior owner of this house admitted to pulling the same move once long ago.That didn't bother him at all. That would have scared the crap out me if I had been on the dozer.
Being used to four wheeling, thankfully I almost automatically engage 4WD in such situations, and before starting the descent.I'm sure I'm not the only one here who's done the mad high-speed freewheeling down the hill on wet grass with a load in the bucket, when the rear tires got just light enough to lose traction.
I have pallet fork holes in the back of my barn to remind me from years ago. A 150lbs gate on forks on a light 2500lbs? L3200 with no rear ballast on a grassy slope is enough.I'm sure I'm not the only one here who's done the mad high-speed freewheeling down the hill on wet grass with a load in the bucket, when the rear tires got just light enough to lose traction. Heck, I know I'm not the first person to do it in my own back yard, the prior owner of this house admitted to pulling the same move once long ago.
What I do remember about that incident is how far and fast you can travel in the second or two it can take your brain to realize what's even happening, and come up with a solution to the problem. Of course that solution was to put the bucket down, but when you're bouncing along toward a cluster of trees and having trouble just keeping your own butt in the seat, it can take a few seconds to come around to that idea and then execute upon it.
Yeah, and I know better, too. One time I failed to engage 4wd, and once was enough to keep me reminded the next 20 years. If I'm not backing down the hill, it goes into 4wd, every time.Being used to four wheeling, thankfully I almost automatically engage 4WD in such situations, and before starting the descent.
When I was a kid I worked for a guy who would pull a fully loaded hay wagon with a 9N. Going down hills he would turn the ignition on and off to slow it down because the brakes couldn't do it alone. Sitting on top of the hay wagon was kind of a thrill.I watched my old neighbor let the 9N pop out of gear and high speed roll down his very big hill busting though the sage brush thicket at a high rate of speed. Luckily he held on and kept it straight to the bottom. The only damage was to his underwear![]()
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