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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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question on my fast hitch on 230

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Randy in Pa

01-12-2005 19:57:39




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Hello guys,

I was wondering about my hitch. I have never plowed a field in my life(I have run a front tine walk behind rototiller) (my farming experience in a nutshell :)

anyway about my 230 hitch... someone converted it to 3 point some time ago, and made inserts with the eyeballs on the end to take the cat 1 pins. The hitch itself is in the shape of a wishbone and is fastened under the tractor rear end.

Where it fastens on wants to swivel back and forth a few inches. Now also back at the connection there is an arm that sticks out and up off the wishbone that nothing is hooked to. IT looks to me that the hitch is upside down, cause the arm is sticking out the passenger side, and on the drivers side there is a rod not hooked to anything that goes to some kind of adjustment that looks like a handle that can go up and down that the driver can reach from the seat.

Can somebody enlighten me on how this is supposed to work, and why there is back and forth play in the hitch?

Randy in pa

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shrps74

01-13-2005 05:52:17




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Randy in Pa, 01-12-2005 19:57:39  
I have an "early" '57 230. You will notice that you do not have rockshafts on your hydraulic block. Super C's had options for adjustments to the 2pt via the rockshaft arms. 230's don't (at least mine doesn't). In order to get the plow to suck into the ground you will need to extend the arm that attaches to the front of the wishbone and then is now probably attached to the side of the torque tube (found on the "passenger side", as you put it). This will need to be changed to hook up with the attachment bolt holes (you will have 3) located at the forward end of the torque tube. The only one that will bolt it will be the bottom most hole. You will also have to take a pin out of the arm to extend it, then put the pin back in to hold it at this length. You will note that the arm will rotate 180 degrees to let you bolt this to the attachment bracket. All this does is to tilt the 2 pt so the plow points on a 2 pt plow toward the earth. I know this sounds complicated but once you look at the whole thing it will become somewhat intuitive. As said before, is your plow a 2pt (C-20) or a 3 pt? Hope this helps.....BobG in VA

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Hugh MacKay

01-13-2005 02:52:02




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Randy in Pa, 01-12-2005 19:57:39  
Randy: First your hitch must have side to side movement while plowing. A rigid hitch is not what keeps your plow straight, the landsides do that. Plowing with a rigid hitch, you would not be able to turn even the slightest curve.

The handle at back, being the one large enough to put your full hand in D is designed to adjust your draft control. Another item to watch is just how well that draft control works after all these years. That system was IH's introduction into draft control, it saw great improvments in the 10 years that followed.

You didn't say whether you are going to use a 3 point plow or 2 point fast hitch plow. The hitch was designed for the fast hitch plow. Just not sure how well a 3 point plow will work. It may take a bit of tinkering.

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Randy in Pa

01-13-2005 06:55:29




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-13-2005 02:52:02  
Thanks Bob,

IT is making a little more sense. I will look at it closer today.

Thanks

Randy



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Randy in Pa

01-13-2005 06:52:35




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Hugh MacKay, 01-13-2005 02:52:02  
Draft control. That sounds like it. It looks like all it does is to let the hitch move back and forth a little bit.

Dosent seem like it does much.

I am actually going to move snow with a rear blade and not plow fields, so I am tring to get all the play out of the hitch. Some one has disconnected the draft control and flopped the hitch upside down for some reason, and now the wishbone has a few inches back and forth play.

I was just going to weld a block of steel in it to keep it from moving, to get the rest of the play out of the hitch.

I can imagine this hurting anything, do you?

Thanks

Randy

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Hugh MacKay

01-13-2005 13:10:11




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Randy in Pa, 01-13-2005 06:52:35  
Randy: By the sounds of it someone has already been doing some modified welding, if that wish bone as you call it is up side down. From here on, I don't suspect it will matter a whole lot what you weld. If you want help here your descriptions will have to improve. Perhaps you could post a photo, picture is worth a thousand words.



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Novel Idea Guy

01-13-2005 08:32:21




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Randy in Pa, 01-13-2005 06:52:35  
I would make absolutely, positively, SURE that your hitch has been "flipped upside down." If it is, I would also seriously consider taking it apart and putting it back together correctly.

The fact that it's assembled incorrectly may be the reason for all the play. Welding stuff to it willy-nilly will probably make the hitch useless for its original intention.



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Randy in Pa

01-13-2005 08:37:41




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 Re: question on my fast hitch on 230 in reply to Novel Idea Guy, 01-13-2005 08:32:21  
This is true. I just tacked a block on there temporary this morning just to get the play out for now. Supposed to get bad here in the northeast and I might get to actually plow some snow!

Thanks

Randy



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