SPYDERLK
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2006
- Messages
- 10,329
- Location
- VA
- Tractor
- JD2010, Kubota3450,2550, Mahindra 7520 w FEL w Skid Steer QC w/Tilt Tatch, & BH, BX1500
The curl is weak because of the design having close spacing of force application point and the carrier pivot. It gives a lot of movement with a cheaper cylinder. Doing it right would cost more and they thot they could get away with it. The only way itll get better is if the customers give them lots of grief for long enuf that they notice its costing them money to go cheap.It appears that few tractor builders are making their own loaders. I mourned the weakness of the LS loader on my 41 HP as compared to the Woods/Cub Cadet I had on my 27 HP. I later got a 30 HP CC with a down-powered Woods loader. But, I can attribute my killing the front drive axle on the 27 HP to the loader overkill it had. One must be careful when making a battle between the loader structure and the pulling or pushing power of four wheels with traction and a pile of horsepower behind it.
Even though the curl seemed very weak to me on the LS, when the salesman suggested I manipulate the relief pressure, I resisted. In my estimation, the LS' loader is weak and certainly has a smaller reach than the one I had on my Cub Cadet. It seems clear that beefing up one thing increases the chances of failure in a different place, to be determined later. I am sure that tractors break less often for row-crop flat-landers than for big tree hill people. You just gotta learn to be smart (it's taken me some time).
larry