</font><font color="blue" class="small">( the BH-tractor link seems to be able to twist several degrees.)</font>
I think you mean to say the subframe, and yes, it will, by its construction, flex a good deal, but you can also bend it that way.
If you're doing just a bit of slope, it shouldn't be a problem, but I think you can see the potential for damage if you have a lot of slope.
When you are on a slope, don't try picking up the down side to where the tire comes off the ground and you become level. Not only are you taking away part of the support from the rear tire, you're also putting too much stress on the stabilizer. They're not built to withstand much of the stress of being the total support.
If you were on a slope, lifted the rear tire off the ground to get level and the stabilizer were to break, the momentum could be enough to flip the tractor over on you. Better for you to sit a little crooked on the slope with the stabilizers just engaging the ground enough to keep the rear end from being pulled down with your digging strokes, that's what they're designed to do on a compact tractor.
I have recenlty been reading all that I can find about different ways of using backhoes, and cutting out level areas is a theme that keeps repeating in the different media I've found.
Yes, that could be detrimental to landscapes, but if it's a steep slope, you shouldn't be depending on a compact tractor backhoe's stabilizer to hold you up straight on it.
I've used mine many times with the tractor and backhoe at an angle, and it feels strange, yes, but I don't have a problem using it while I lean to one side. I think it goes with my lopsided brain just fine! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
John