BeaconWoods
Bronze Member
So after 482 hours of operating the MFWD lever on my M62 by reaching way down to engage or disengage, my back had had enough and I finally decided to change things to how I think they should be from the factory. Here's my procedure:
Remove the fancy orange knob and the short factory extension it is attached to. It has flats on the end. Mine were mostly blocked by the plastic sleeve over it.
Find a suitable bit of rod to use as an extension. Mine was some 3/8" rebar left over from a trellis project my wife had me do (I'm the farmer's husband).
I heated up the end with a torch and pounded a nice flat on it using a four pound hand sledge I bought at an auction a couple years ago and have looked for a use for ever since. Drill a hole in the newly formed flat the size of the stud on the short extension.
Screw the short factory extension back on. Slip the hole of the new extension over the stud on the short factory extension. Mark appropriate length, remove from tractor, and cut it off.
Acquire a bolt with the same (metric) thread as the knob / stud on the short extension. I found one in the ashtray of my '98 Camry. It was left over from a front brake job I did a couple years ago.
Reattach your freshly cut off extension. Thread the knob onto your newly found bolt (check the ashtray of your '98 Camry), find a good angle for the knob. Remove new extension, unscrew knob, weld the bolt on to your new extension.
Taking a clue from Kubota, they had placed a plastic sleeve over the short factory extension, I slipped a bit of red PEX over the new extension and installed the new lever. You will need another washer and it would not hurt to use a thicker nut. The factory one behind the knob is thin - it's just a jam nut.
It works like a dream and my back is happy as can be. Enjoy the pics. BTW, the whole thing took less than two hours working at a pretty slow pace - it was about 90 degrees outside.
Here are a couple pictures.


I dropped them all at M62 MFWD lever as it should be. - Album on Imgur
Happy modifying!
P.S. For those of you still ruminating about the leftover bolt from the brake job, the new caliper came with new fasteners.
Remove the fancy orange knob and the short factory extension it is attached to. It has flats on the end. Mine were mostly blocked by the plastic sleeve over it.
Find a suitable bit of rod to use as an extension. Mine was some 3/8" rebar left over from a trellis project my wife had me do (I'm the farmer's husband).
I heated up the end with a torch and pounded a nice flat on it using a four pound hand sledge I bought at an auction a couple years ago and have looked for a use for ever since. Drill a hole in the newly formed flat the size of the stud on the short extension.
Screw the short factory extension back on. Slip the hole of the new extension over the stud on the short factory extension. Mark appropriate length, remove from tractor, and cut it off.
Acquire a bolt with the same (metric) thread as the knob / stud on the short extension. I found one in the ashtray of my '98 Camry. It was left over from a front brake job I did a couple years ago.
Reattach your freshly cut off extension. Thread the knob onto your newly found bolt (check the ashtray of your '98 Camry), find a good angle for the knob. Remove new extension, unscrew knob, weld the bolt on to your new extension.
Taking a clue from Kubota, they had placed a plastic sleeve over the short factory extension, I slipped a bit of red PEX over the new extension and installed the new lever. You will need another washer and it would not hurt to use a thicker nut. The factory one behind the knob is thin - it's just a jam nut.
It works like a dream and my back is happy as can be. Enjoy the pics. BTW, the whole thing took less than two hours working at a pretty slow pace - it was about 90 degrees outside.
Here are a couple pictures.


I dropped them all at M62 MFWD lever as it should be. - Album on Imgur
Happy modifying!
P.S. For those of you still ruminating about the leftover bolt from the brake job, the new caliper came with new fasteners.