<font color=blue>you can go to at least 30 degrees front/back</font color=blue>
You may be right, GlueGuy, but my pucker factor kicks in before I even get to 25.
Interestingly, I tried to follow my neighbor one time, and he toodled down steep slopes and made hilly turns like they were nothing. Now, he's driving a
B2150 and I'm on my
L2500, and when he dropped down a short, steep drop and hung a 90-degree right turn at the bottom, he left me behind. Besides puckering up on the drop, my bucket bottomed out at the bottom where the path leveled out, so I had to raise the FEL just as I started the right turn. The slope was about 20 degrees, so even with the left front on the flat I was getting a good 15-degree side tilt. With the raised bucket, I could definitely feel the right-side tires getting very light on the ground. Enough for me -- I backed out and took a longer, flatter route. /w3tcompact/icons/blush.gif
My long-winded point here is that I was left with the impression that besides being shorter overall, the B-machine had a lower center of gravity than my 'L'. It wasn't just this one incident that led me to that conclusion, but it was the one that made me realize we had very tractors. I think I posed the question about C/G before on a different thread, but nobody came up with answers at that time.
At any rate, your point about the front/rear slope indicator is a good one, but the likelihood of
me needing more range than the #25c offers is quite small.