I just went through the tractor manual and the loader manual. They both mention using appropriate rear ballast but there is absolutely no guidance as to amount of weight.
Actually it did. It said use
appropriate ballast.
Appropriate ballast varies, depending what you are doing on the other end of the tractor, and also how far that appropriate ballast stick out on the 3 point. The reason for using weasel words like
appropriate is because they don't know what you are doing, or how your ballast is arranged, and they don't want litigation from you. You are supposed to have a brain and some experience and the knowledge to apply that experience to the situation at hand.
"Well how am I supposed to gain experience when I am just a new tractor owner" you ask? "I don't want to be dead, and I don't want to tear anything up" Well, that is why you come to TBN to ask questions. And we have told you to put between 500 and 600 lbs on your 3 point, and stop wearing your self to a frazzle by manually putting on weights, and either buy or build yourself a ballast box if you don't have anything else that heavy to hang on the 3pt, and most importantly "
go on from there". In other words, see how that works, and adjust accordingly per you own experience in your own situation. Obviously if your loader will still pickup enough weight that one or more rear tires come off of the ground or even "get light", than that is not enough. Use what used to be known as "
common sense". What that means is think for yourself, and apply your experience to the situation at hand, observe the results, and adjust as
appropriately necessary.