Does This Happen to Anyone Else?

/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #1  

BoneheadNW

Gold Member
Joined
Mar 26, 2005
Messages
264
Location
Washington
Tractor
Kubota B7610
I know I'm a rookie tractor operator, but there are a couple of things that routinely happen to me on my tractor and I just gotta know if other people are as lame as I am.

1. When I mount my tractor from the left side (hey, no crude remarks!), more times than not my hand or hip will hit the pto lever and shove it backwards, causing it to grind a little. Nothing major, but it frustrates me when I do it.

2. Again, when I am mounting the tractor (are you seeing a pattern here?), my hand sometimes gets trapped between the front seat and the seat for the backhoe, causing my fingers to get pinched. At this point I'm cursing at myself for not keeping the BH seat raised, although I think my neighbor thought I was cursing at him (I kept yelling Mother ------, that really hurt!).

3. Finally, when I shut the tractor down at the end of the day (aren't you glad this isn't another tractor mounting problem?), I have a bad habit of leaving the key in the ignition. The tractor is stored in my garage and my 9 year old son is on alert to remind me to take the key.

Do these things happen to anyone else?

Bonehead
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #2  
Ehhhhh....no......these things happen to no one else...only you! /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif But please do start taking your keys out! /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif

....Tony
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #3  
Tractors have a nifty assortment of levers, knobs, handles all placed within easy reach of the seated operator. But when the operator either leaves or returns to the seat, there are any number of ways all those items get hooked by clothing, or your hands, or just get pushed to another position.

Getting on or off your tractor is one of the dangerous moves - whether it's running or not. A lot can happen and a wrong move can lead to loud comments about it's mother..

Tractors are a great extension of power in your hands. But they can bite you. I always try to engage the squash first - but I still screw up a lot, even after all these years. I think everybody does now and then.
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #4  
It has come to my understanding that the most dangerous move is dismounting the tractor while wearing baggy shorts. Seems some unwitting individual snagged his PTO lever while jummping off the tractor and was hanging by his crotch on that lever (and that was a good test of the strength of the lever, which, if it could have shown any mercy at all, would have snapped off at a very critical moment, BUT NO, it did not even have the common decency to bend). Now don't ask me how I know of this story, or who that witless individual might be /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #5  
Don't worry. Leave the keys in the tractor. Your son will soon be on it levelling the front lawn with the box blade just like you wanted.

/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

There was a thread recently where one TBN member's teenage son got drunk and borrowed his dad's tractor and went on a small rampage. Might be worth a read.

Tractor Rampage
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #6  
Bob, I can't believe somebody would do such a thing! /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
I know of a guy who was also wearing some loose shorts and dismounted the tractor on the right side and got hung up on the FEL joystick. When I.... I mean somebody got hung up only one leg found the ground and the rest wasn't pretty. Good thing the FEL was on the ground and the tractor wasn't running! He never get off on that side anymore! /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #7  
That PTO lever in the way was one of the reasons I went with an L series tractor, I was constantly hitting that lever on the B7500 I had.
I haven't had any mounting or dismounting problems yet with my L2800. I always leave the keys in the tractor also but there are no kids within a couple miles of the tractor and my dogs haven't figured out how to start it yet /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #8  
With only 16 hours on the tractor you are still getting used to is and hopefully you will adjust your habits to avoid the levers, etc. when getting off and on.

As for the keys, when I have something I need to remember I have a couple of different ways of handling it.

One way is to put the key in someplace obvious (to you, not your son). If it gone you will be reminded to go out and get it.

The other method is to use something else to remind you. For instance, you could lock the key in a cabinet. When you get the tractor key out hang a towel or rag on the cabinet to remind you to put the key back. When you put the tractor key back put the towel in the cabinet with it so you will have it there for next time.

Last alternative, hide the tractor key in the kid's school books, he will never see it.

As I get older I have to devise more ways to remember things!

Bill Tolle
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #9  
I'm afraid that if I didn't leave the key in the tractor I'd never find it.
penokee /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #10  
Bonehead, no it sounds like you're just a klutz.....

Just kidding. The problem I have is getting OFF the tractor. I seem to always manage to get my cutoffs on a lever. Once I fell on my face, and other time it ripped my britches plumb off of me!

The problem with the 2710 is that the control levers are on top of the fender. On bigger tractors the levers are inside the fenders.
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #11  
1. When I mount my tractor from the left side (hey, no crude remarks!), more times than not my hand or hip will hit the pto lever and shove it backwards, causing it to grind a little. Nothing major, but it frustrates me when I do it.

2. Again, when I am mounting the tractor (are you seeing a pattern here?), my hand sometimes gets trapped between the front seat and the seat for the backhoe, causing my fingers to get pinched. At this point I'm cursing at myself for not keeping the BH seat raised, although I think my neighbor thought I was cursing at him (I kept yelling Mother ------, that really hurt!).


<font color="blue"> Don't you have a grab handle on your tractor fender? Maybe you should add one
</font>

3. Finally, when I shut the tractor down at the end of the day (aren't you glad this isn't another tractor mounting problem?), I have a bad habit of leaving the key in the ignition. The tractor is stored in my garage and my 9 year old son is on alert to remind me to take the key.


<font color="blue"> Boy...please take those keys out of the ignition! Sooner or later, your son or one of his friends won't be able to resist temptation. That's a tragedy in the making, so be proactive to prevent it!

According to your profile, you're a Firefighter/EMT. You've already seen the results of accidents involving a young'un playing where he shouldn't be. Be smart, man...take those keys out of the ignition!</font>
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #12  
I notice from your profile you have a B7610.

Before buying my B7800 I was seriously looking at the B7510 or B7610. One of the key reasons I decided on the B7800 was because the seating on both the B7510 and B7610 seemed cramped to me. The B7800 was easier to mount and dismount and there was also more room to twist your legs around when you needed to look to the rear of the tractor to observe rear mount implement operations, (grading or snowblowing).
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #13  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( <font color="blue"> It has come to my understanding that the most dangerous move is dismounting the tractor while wearing baggy shorts </font> )</font>

Isn't that the truth, still do it though. I've found that the only way to prevent it is to come off the tractor backwards, facing the same way as you get on. I still get in a hurry and just step off. I usually hear a ripping sound and find myself face down, making a real close inspection of the grass. I haven't bent any of the levers so I think the secret is to buy really cheap work shorts. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif My wife still hasn't figured out why I have all these shorts with the left leg ripped to various degrees. She thinks it's a new fashion statement.

Sorry I can't help with the rest of it. I have no problems getting on and always leave the keys in it ... no kids and the dog's legs are too short to reach the pedals. Besides, they won't travel in anything that's not air conditioned. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #16  
I've had the BH seat problem, too. I solved it by keeping the BH seat raised, when I'm not actually using it, by hooking a short bungee cord form the top of the seat to the guard bar in front of the BH joysticks. This is practically a necessity on the B7800 (with Woods 7500 BH) because the BH seat, if it is down, prevents the tractor seat from lowering fully and deactivating the seat-triggered engine cutout. Thus, unless you have the BH seat fixed in raised position, you keep killing the engine.
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #17  
I wasn't going to admit it, but I've done the same thing! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Getting off the tractor, hooking the left leg of my shorts and finding myself hanging by them off the PTO control lever face in the dirt!!! /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Does This Happen to Anyone Else? #18  
I was going to post that you have assumed that all tractor operators are men, but that would be in poor taste so I won't do it.
/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
Martin
 

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