Top Link Pins

   / Top Link Pins #1  

AlanB

Elite Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2004
Messages
2,550
Location
Clarksville, TN, USA
Tractor
NH 1925
Why does the "head" of a top link pin look like it does?

GENERAL - Top Link Pins

Is there some form of handle or something that hooks in there? I assume the normal handle headed pins are not used for clearance issues, and you need something to grab onto to pull the pin out, but why not just make them straight?

It also strikes me as Odd that most look the same, so if nothing fits that groove, why do all the manufacturers put it there?

Just curious.
 
   / Top Link Pins #2  
AlanB said:
Why does the "head" of a top link pin look like it does?

GENERAL - Top Link Pins

Is there some form of handle or something that hooks in there? I assume the normal handle headed pins are not used for clearance issues, and you need something to grab onto to pull the pin out, but why not just make them straight?

It also strikes me as Odd that most look the same, so if nothing fits that groove, why do all the manufacturers put it there?

Just curious.

I've got a couple old pins that were O.E.M. with dads 1956 Ferguson F-40. (Ferguson invented the 3-point hitch. Even the venerable "N series" Fords used "The Ferguson System") They have a "keeper chain" attached to them. It employs an "s" hook type end that's wrapped around the head of the pin. The chain was then attached to the top link. It was a major inconvenience, though it actually sounded like a good idea. Old habits die hard. I don't know that a top link pin HAS to be shaped like that, just that they have for so long, no one wants to break tradition.
 
   / Top Link Pins #3  
I have no answer for your question. I do use the hitch pins with a handle for the top link end on the emplement side. Been doing that for 30 year. They are much easier to push in and remove with a handle.
 
   / Top Link Pins
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Thanks FWJ that makes sense too me.

I was up just past your area this past weekend and thought about you a bit. I ride Motorcycles and was up around Bedford, and spent the night in Shelbyville. Got to go over to Radcliffe next month or so for an event as well.
 
   / Top Link Pins #5  
years of tradition unimpeded by progress and technology?
 
   / Top Link Pins #6  
AlanB said:
Thanks FWJ that makes sense too me.

I was up just past your area this past weekend and thought about you a bit. I ride Motorcycles and was up around Bedford, and spent the night in Shelbyville. Got to go over to Radcliffe next month or so for an event as well.

I'm closer to Radcliffe than Shelbyville or Bedford. More or less in the middle of a triangle drawn between the three towns. Radcliffe is the "big city" for the guys at Ft. Knox. Lots of tattoo parlors, pawn shops, and car lots like any "army town". We go through Radcliffe en route to my wifes uncle's place.
 
   / Top Link Pins #7  
I usually slip a large or extra hairpin on mine.. just so I don't drop them as much...

Soundguy
 

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