Description
If you’ve ever had your bush hog swing sideways and bang into your rear tire, or watched your disc harrow drift all over creation while working a hillside, you know exactly why stabilizers matter. This chain stabilizer is the simple solution that keeps your equipment centered and under control, whether you’re transporting down narrow lanes or working on hillsides where implement sway can be downright dangerous. When your three-point implements start wandering, this handy part brings them back in line.
What You’re Getting
- Mounts securely to your tractor’s three-point linkage for solid attachment points
- Prevents dangerous implement sway during transport and keeps equipment tracking straight
- Allows quick adjustment for different implement widths so you can fine-tune control
- Constructed from thick steel plate to handle constant tension and jerking forces
Built for Real Farm Work
Your Ford New Holland tractors from the 10 Series down through the older 4000, 600, and 700 Series are versatile machines that handle everything from mowing to loader work. These tractors often switch between implements multiple times per day. Without proper stabilizers, your disc harrow can swing into tire sidewalls, your bush hog can wander on slopes, and your box blade becomes a hazard when raised for transport. This chain stabilizer works with your existing three-point setup to keep implements where they belong.
Made to Last
Constructed from thick steel plate, this bracket handles the constant tension and jerking forces from heavy implements. The mounting holes are reinforced to prevent elongation from stress, while the chain attachment points are designed to resist wear from constant chain movement. The finish resists rust and corrosion from fertilizer, road salt, and weather exposure.
Installation Notes
Installation is straightforward – mount the bracket to your lower link arms using the supplied hardware. Position it to allow proper chain angle without binding. Make sure your stabilizer chains are the correct length – too short restricts necessary float, too long allows excessive sway. A quick tip: adjust your chains with the implement in working position, not transport position – this ensures proper float during field work while still controlling transport sway.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.