I sure hope the naysayers view this. As all can see from the photo, it is a long way from tipping over when the front axle hits the stops.
I have been trying to tell folks that the front axle does help in tipping situations but all I get is, "IT swivels and by the time it hits, it is too far gone" Well this photo proves that it isn't too far and the front axle definitely does help prevent a roll over. Putting ballast in the front tires would certainly help also.
Glad you made it out safe and sound....and thank you for taking the pic.:thumbsup: On a scale of 1-10 what was the pucker factor at???:laughing:
Clearly the pucker factor was not high enough to cause him to lower the sled to the ground and remove himself, his tractor and his sled from impending danger. The Darwin Principle missed out on a statistic here. Taking time for a pic in these circumstances is just plain dumb.
I started to step off (to take a pic) and my weight leaving the tractor started it to tip. I leaned out to try to stop it but it kept going, until it came up against the stops on the front axle WHEW!. Was just about to throw the FEL down, which would have dropped the snowmobile.
I sat there for a moment realizing it was stable, and then carefully stepped off completely because now I HAD to take a pic. I pushed on it a little to confirm it was stable, and it was, so I quickly took a pic and climbed back on, and lowered the loader very very slowly, and the rear wheel came down.
. but for all those preaching about how stupid you were, I want to know if they ever did anything stupid on their tractors? and have the pic to prove it! :laughing:
Putting ballast in the front tires would certainly help also.
Thanks for the pics and all the constructive comments that were made in reference to this type of situation . It makes one think what could have happened , I have tipped my 5700 just slightly a couple times and gets your attention real quick .
Man, I feel responsible for asking for action shots... but for all those preaching about how stupid you were, I want to know if they ever did anything stupid on their tractors? At least you were man enough to admit it and have the pic to prove it! :laughing: I will admit getting myself in a pickle or three with my BX but I haven't posted a pic.... yet.![]()
And NO, I did not take any darn pictures!.
Then I guess it didn't actually happen![]()
Clearly the pucker factor was not high enough to cause him to lower the sled to the ground and remove himself, his tractor and his sled from impending danger.
Some great lessons... It only takes one little lapse of judgement especially on a slope! I will venture to guess that almost every pucker event I have had was not on flat ground.Me do something stupid on a tractor? Ha ha.. um.. yeah. A couple of years ago, I lifted a rock with the Kubota L3400hst with the forks that was at the absolute limits of the loader even just getting it a few inches off of the ground I had to get it close to the mast. I had it about a foot off of the ground and started to move it into position to place it on a rock wall we were building, when the wife said that it was not going to fit, and asked me to get off and help her move another rock to make room for this one.
So by habit I shut down the tractor and dropped the rear ballast on the ground like I always do. I should have dropped the rock on the ground, but I had so much trouble just getting it up I did not do that.
As I got off of the tractor on the downhill side (maybe 10 degree slope) I noticed the tractor was rolling over towards me as I was getting off. I pushed the tractor back more upright and held it until the wife could get around the other side and push the FEL lever forward to drop the rock on the ground.
Lessons learned, ballast on the ground is not doing you any good. Lesson two, if you are getting off, drop the load too. Lesson three, try to not park on a side slope (almost impossible here in Branson). Biggest lesson of all, think through every action of what might happen. While my rock was just a foot off of the ground and the tractor may not have turned over if I had just let it continue to roll over, (the rock may have touched the ground before the tractor rolled over) but still it was very disconcerting that my weight was holding the right rear tire on the ground. Obviously if the rock was up in the air several feet, I have no doubt the tractor would have rolled over.