Whatever I did to anger the tractor gods must have been pretty good because their wrath is ongoing--about the same as the autocorrect damon that spells stuff wrong when I hit the Post Reply button...though the damage from the tread on those
lawn tires isn't going to be fixable with backspace.
Since Summit Hydraulics hadn't returned my emails regarding the wrong Top & Tilt parts I called them; they basically said the BX "kit" is more of a generic set of parts that gets close to fitting the BX, that's what they mean by "kit." Now had they put that on their website I'd have not waited on them to ship a "kit" for more than a year and instead cherry picked the parts they stocked that I needed and fabbed up my own side link with a better choice of cylinder for my setup, but that's not the case, and I didn't want to learn hydraulics, hence buying a "kit" for the BX...
...If you can't tell I'm disappointed because the lead on this project (me) doesn't know what he's doing: everything I know about hydraulics I learned here--which I'm thankful for, but at this point it's like going to a rock concert and then being expected to play guitar--watching someone play doesn't make you good at playing. This is
not something I expected nor wanted to learn. Let the mistakes begin...
First things first, mount the hydraulic top link to the tractor. Simple enough, but I can't get it to go. At least Summit let me know what to expect and my attitude was now adjusted to think of this as if I sourced my own parts.
Width of the 3-point top link bracket: 43mm
Width of the Kubota top link bushing: 40mm
Width of the Summit hydraulic top link bushing: 44mm
Even if I convert that to inches it's not going to fit. Time to void some Warranty and break out the parts shrinker.
1/100" clearance and square/parallel within 0.004" using a redneck hand lathe...good enough for government work.
Let's hope the pin fits...
