Thanks for the quick replies. I stared at both pictures and did not see the width difference. My box blade is about 1/4" too wide for the narrower one. Looks like I might have to opt for the cheaper one (it usually works out the other way).
California, thanx for the pic. Couldn't the hook be modified to make it stick out further to eliminate the need for the adapter?
Doc, it looks like there is a pin for the top link forward of the hook at the top of the hitch.
If you only need a quarter inch use a hi-lift jack to spread the smaller QH and save $20. They probably adjusted it to 26.5000 (+-.375) with a BFH in the first place.
I've thought about modifying the hook. It would need to be ground out to a larger opening, replaced, or else you would have to weld a 1 inch thick strap along the hook's back edge then drill new holes closer to the back edge.
But the problem I have on some of my implements is there are two pins in the implement's mast. You can't hook the upper pin because the lower pin is in the way. You can't discard the lower pin, or hook to it, because support straps to the rear of the implement attach there. This is evident in my photo of the disc, above.
I'm attaching another photo I posted a while back, (Doc why can't we re-use photos already on the server?) showing forks I made from junk on hand.
You can see I replaced the QH hook bolts with pins, for easier height adjustment. Note the lips where those pins go. The lips stick out beyond the QH's chassis, a design flaw in my opinion. The $250 more expensive John Deere QH has its hook welded flush to the face of the chassis without those lips, and provides better clearance at the cost of no adjustability. I still couldn't use a JD QH with my implements due to that lower-pin conflict I mentioned.
You can see in this second photo that I discarded the mast's lower pin from implements where it didn't seem critical. I can back up and hook this box blade without getting off the tractor.
