Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading

   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #81  
Thanks, that is good to know! So with the Tractor off, parking brake set, an attachment locked on the QA plate, and the attachment lowered to the ground preventing the FEL from lowering further, I should be safe to straddle the FEL when I have to. Maybe better phrasing would be safer but avoid moving the joystick in any case.

Sounds good. I do that all the time in my garage when climbing over the tractor to get to the other side. My garage is short and the PT with plow is up against the doors, so my only two routes to the other side of the shed are over or through the PT! :laughing:
 
   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #82  
On this thread, I had a **** of a scare when I first got my PT. The block under the PT Arms had a small leak. I lifted the machine, with my mower attached, and reached in to tighten. But instead I loosened. While I had plenty of time to get out (maybe a 6 seconds to completely drop and I was out in 2) it sure changed my perspective on the force coming down. And the oil spraying out was pretty strong (not 3KPSI Strong, but still).

I still climb under now and then to bang free a stuck blade but I never get all the way under...
 
   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #83  
One of the members on here a long time ago mentioned that he was going to do something to the front of his pt with the loader arms raised and he put a stick under the arms to support it while he worked. The stick that he used he never tried out first to see if it would support the weight. When the weight of the loader arms and whatever he had attached to it settled down on the stick the stick broke. Lesson if you are going to prop the lift arms up for some reason to work on your machine make sure your blocking material will for sure hold the weight of the loader arms and that it can't slip out from under the arms while working on it.
 
   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #84  
One of the members on here a long time ago mentioned that he was going to do something to the front of his pt with the loader arms raised and he put a stick under the arms to support it while he worked. The stick that he used he never tried out first to see if it would support the weight. When the weight of the loader arms and whatever he had attached to it settled down on the stick the stick broke. Lesson if you are going to prop the lift arms up for some reason to work on your machine make sure your blocking material will for sure hold the weight of the loader arms and that it can't slip out from under the arms while working on it.

Attached are pictures of my "sticks".
 

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   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #85  
Bob I remember seeing your system of blocking and I thought it was a good idea. The member that I am talking about never posted pictures I don't believe, instead his post was meant to be a warning to save one of us from making a similar mistake. Anyway I appreciate anyone that posts a warning of something that they have encountered that may cause harm to someone, even if I already knew proper blocking techniques it never hurts to bring something back to our attention before the need arises to do a project. Glade you got the winch figured out.
 
   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #87  
Patrick- how did the snow thrower work for you?

I put snow chains on my PT422 for the first time, and discovered that I had to reverse the wheels to avoid carving out chunks of the engine tub. Sure wish that PT had moved the motor mounts out about half an inch when they built these things.
 
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   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading
  • Thread Starter
#88  
Patrick- how did the snow thrower work for you?

I put snow chains on my PT422 for the first time, and discovered that I had to reverse the wheels to avoid carving out chunks of the engine tub. Sure wish that PT had moved the motor mounts out about half an inch when they built these things.

The thrower worked very well, but was somewhat overkill for only 10 inches of snow. Its much better suited for 20" +. Initially, on the dog runs I was trying to leave only an inch on the ground -- it kept digging-in due to the unevenness of the ground. I really had to raise it up leaving 2-3 inches on the ground. Tilting back did not seem to help much. The casters seem to be mostly useless. Perhaps with casters on front and back it could kinda float over the ground at the set height. My neighbor suggested welding skid shoes on the bottom. But, I think the skid would also catch on the uneven ground. The situation was essentially the same on the crusher stone driveway. Today I made a pass with the power sweeper to get down to leaving 1/2" to 1" on the ground. The sweeper also would periodically dig-in, the height having to be continually adjusted. This experience was very different from the videos where throwers and sweepers are working smoothly on paved driveways and sidewalks.

I decided to test the PT-425 without chains. The machine had no problem with the 10 inches of heavy wet snow. It pushed the 350 lb thrower up a short (15 ft )15 degree slope easily. The engine worked harder going up but there was no slippage. Note that I raised the thrower a foot so there was no contact on the way up.
 
   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading
  • Thread Starter
#89  
Folks, after a couple of hours blowing snow yesterday I decided to unattached the thrower and attach the sweeper. The 1/4 quick connectors came off easily. But I could not re-connect the QA coupler -- it just would not connect. My neighbor dropped by and he could not connect it either. We tried all the techniques discussed in the thread to no avail. To be brief, the next day we were finally able to connect it only by one person holding down the Aux handle while the other pushed the connector on. That is a new technique that I could never do by myself. Frustrating! I did try the tap tap method to relieve the pressure in the hoses. Cycling the Aux level did not seem to work.

Below are some photos of the couplers.
 

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   / Videos of New PT425 Arriving/Unloading #90  
Hi Patrick,

I posted earlier about using a rubber hook strap or bungee cord to hold the lever up or down. That is what I have to do on mine every so often. I just store it wrapped around the ROPS. I also find that it works best for me to attach the "return" first then the supply. So looking at the PT from the front, I attach the right hand one first.

Ken
 

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