#10 I guess I won't worry about it.1) The A frame mount is not horizontal. If the blade is angled, the blade will be tilted.
2) Some thing is bent, hopefully not something cracked, torn or parent metal torn.
3) The blade is level, but the tractor or the garage is tilted.
4) The mounts are worn and the blade is not centered, so the weight offset is pulling one side down.
5) A previous owner liked having a crowned driveway and set it up slanted for good drainage.
6) More rust on one side than the other (or even more paint on one side than the other).
7) Flat front tire.
8) Wrong mount holes selected on one side.
9) Weight compensating seat: When the operator in on-board, things are all level and square.
10) That's the way they all are.
Nah, it's the right blade, the attachment in the middle for the lift is right. It's missing wheels and something else just above where the wheel would go. Just don't know what and it still functions.From the second pic of the tractor-to-blade attachment, it appears that the blade is not meant for that tractor, and a rube goldberg rigging was made.
But admit, do not know that for certain...
I don't know, I'm speculating it's missing wheels it looks like it's missing wheels. I'll slap 2 of them on there and see what happens. All my scouring of the interwebs has led me to a picture of model m03480x, that had wheels.Obviously, if the wheels are missing, there goes the support and alignment. The shafts above the wheels are not used in this application. It's common for a part like this to be used with other tractors. In the serial numbers above 50001, those shafts aren't even present.
Thanks!P/N - M121038 - $4.46 plus shipping.