dodge man
Super Star Member
6 year old post but good answer.
....Well, on the 3rd pass and being the grass was soaked from the downpour earlier the tractors rear end slid out, and instead of going down towards the park it headed for the retaining wall, he couldn't get out of the slide.....When the back wheels hit, that's all she wrote, it tumbled head over heels, He went to jump as it hit the wall but caught his boot strings on the clutch, then jumped again with force to break them. he hit the pavement and rolled and so lucky he did as the tractor landed where he originally landed....
Now back to my buddy, he was ok except, a week before he got 30 stitches in his leg from a chainsaw accident so he was on light duty that day driving tractors since he couldn't climb trees...Yeah, he ripped every stitch. Just amazing the slightest slope can be so dangerous...
I was using my grapple to pull up privet bushes the other day. Very thick bushes that were 10-12' feet tall and had some 3&4" base stems. I grabbed a big mouthful of brush, with the roots being rooted just to the left of the grapple end on the left. When I picked up with the grapple, the roots and loader were all strong enough to cause my right side to pop up off the ground. I dropped the loader immediately and took another jab into the soil to break the root hold into the ground, but prior to that happening, I'd never considered that as a mechanism of tipping my tractor.
Hi,
I think the best mind set is to believe there is no safe slope for a tractor!.
I was using my grapple to pull up privet bushes the other day. Very thick bushes that were 10-12' feet tall and had some 3&4" base stems. I grabbed a big mouthful of brush, with the roots being rooted just to the left of the grapple end on the left. When I picked up with the grapple, the roots and loader were all strong enough to cause my right side to pop up off the ground. I dropped the loader immediately and took another jab into the soil to break the root hold into the ground, but prior to that happening, I'd never considered that as a mechanism of tipping my tractor.
I did get to see what the pro's use to mow 45 degree inclines.. they have the tractor on level ground, and extend a boom mounted mower to the incline, and mow the grass!.. it seems the pro's don't want to play Kamikaze for some reason!..