To be fair the spring on my whites is strong, it does take a fair bit of force to open and you can't flick the bucket up to lock it in, you have to lever it openYou can't expect too much from a manual spring hitch tbh unless there's a spring in there so strong you'd need a bar 8ft long. The thing with hydraulic hitches and harford manual wedgelock they don't just hold the rear pin, they also push the bucket back and keep the front pin tight against the back of the jaw.
My old Miller spring hitch used to need the bar rather than flick bucket to click it in. Little dab of grease underneath jaw used to sort that though.To be fair the spring on my whites is strong, it does take a fair bit of force to open and you can't flick the bucket up to lock it in, you have to lever it open
Ditto on my mans. Around 2 years oldTo be fair the spring on my whites is strong, it does take a fair bit of force to open and you can't flick the bucket up to lock it in, you have to lever it open
The smallest bucket can be a pain to get on, if the leading edges of the hitch were just rounded off a bit, I reckon would make life a little easier to get them on.I had a whites hitch on a brand new kx015... what a pile of poops!!! It was near impossible to pick a bucket it up with it, it was all wrong in every thought possible!
Nearly every hitch manufacturer could do with doing that tbh. Its ok if you are working on a perfectly flat level bit of ground but that's rare most places.The smallest bucket can be a pain to get on, if the leading edges of the hitch were just rounded off a bit, I reckon would make life a little easier to get them on.
I have a 20k solution to that problem Gaz - a tiltrotator. Picks buckets up from any angle!Nearly every hitch manufacturer could do with doing that tbh. Its ok if you are working on a perfectly flat level bit of ground but that's rare most places.
Might eventually myself but there's better money generating purchases in the queue first.I have a 20k solution to that problem Gaz - a tiltrotator. Picks buckets up from any angle!
But you've already said its very hilly where you are and you cant pick your buckets up. Think how much time it will save youMight eventually myself but there's better money generating purchases in the queue first.
Are you talking about, basically, an S type hitch but with pin dimensions of a standard pick-up?Our S Type hitches have a constant force on them, both manual and hydraulic! I reckon we could build one on the same principle with a pin grab type manual semi quick hitch.
So who wants to try the proto type out?![]()
Send one here......So who wants to try the proto type out?![]()
Not trying to start a bun fight, but why wouldn’t it work?No that wouldn't work, but I have a design in mind that should
Yes I can see what you mean. But in theory if the brackets were on a flat plate, so no hump in the middle and the brackets were a suitable shape, then it would be possible?Basically an S type hitch sits down into the bracket, it wouldn't be possible to do this on a standard bucket.
Plus your S type hitch generally has a flat bottom, alot of standard buckets have a "hump" on top were the bracket sits.