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#31 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Cherryville, NC
Posts: 76
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Brandi,
Just wanted to let you know I'm also now close to a year working on the barn. Great progress and glad to see you have your roof on (wish I did). I'm suffering that one until I can get enough help. Same problem weekend warrior. I'll give you the same advice I keep hearing.. Don't stop working on it!! Strange thing those people never come to help..haha!!http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/s...59#post1204259 |
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#32 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Willis, Texas
Posts: 801
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Quote:
I would rather be in Alaska at 20 below zero, then the Texas Gulf Coast at 40 degrees and drizzling rain. The Texas Panhandle has blizzards.........in April. April down here we are already sweating and wishing for a cold front. But then, I laugh when y'all complaint about the heat. I have played tennis in Oklahoma in 102 degree heat, but it is dry heat. I have gave a thought or two about leaving the sides off of my barn. But.......oh yeah......that thing called rain. hugs, Brandi |
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#33 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Willis, Texas
Posts: 801
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Quote:
Do a barn roof raising like I did. But have your ducks in a row, or you will be running around like a chicken with it's head cut off. I had barbeque for everyone. I want to work on the barn now, but it is way dry here and I am digging up stumps in the low area that is usually too wet for my Big Red Beast.hugs, Brandi |
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#34 (permalink) | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Northwest, WA
Posts: 1,060
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Awesome looking barn Brandi.
I'm very interested in this PHD you set up. Anymore info ? Quote:
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#35 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Willis, Texas
Posts: 801
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Quote:
Thanks for the barn comment. I would be glad to explain my PHD. I modified the swivel knuckle that came with the PHD to fit my BH where the bucket attaches. I installed quick disconnects on the bucket cylinder lines. I remove the bucket and mount the swivel knuckle and motor, then hook up the auger bit. Then I can use the BH's bucket curl lever to run the auger in forward or reverse from the seat. It came with a 9 & 12 inch auger and an auger extension for around $1800. The welding and machine work on the swivel knuckle was about $130. The line cutting and swaging fittings was around $20. The quick disconnects came from Grainer and cost around $56. I went with these as they were way better quality over what TSC had on hand.Hopefully next time I post photos, it will be from Photobucket. hugs, Brandi |
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#36 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 539
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Attractive...
Independant... Has her own tractor & knows how to use it... Hard working... Now: Smart... That's it, I'm in love! Now that I've got that off my chest, that PHD mod is great. I wish I'd thought of that a bunch of years ago when I punched a few hundred holes in my old place. The normal PHD I used tried to kill me on a daily basis & I don't think any of the holes were exactly where I wanted them or particularly straight either... |
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#38 (permalink) |
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Super Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Tyler, Texas
Posts: 8,302
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Brandi,
I'm very impressed with your post hole digger. If I had it to do all over again, hydraulic is the only way to go, and attaching it to your hoe stick is brilliant. I've seen them on trackhoes, but never thought about doing the same thing on a backhoe. Thanks for posting the pictures of it. I LIKE IT ALLOT!!! Eddie
__________________
My Goals for 2008 1. Fishing and Hunting with my kids. 2. Build my storage Shed. 3. Put my outside access bathroom together. 4. Fence in a quarter acre for Turkeys. 5. Build my gazebo for my front pasture. 6. Finish back pasture and plant it in Bermuda. 7. Start my food plots. 8. Build a comfortable deer stand for two. 9. Build a wood burning fireplace in my home. 10. New flooring in my home. 11. Build a pasture sprayer. 12. Get my old jeep running. |
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#39 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: JellyStone
Posts: 674
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Does the PHD dangle while your transporting? Or can it be folded up against the arm?
Thanks Terry~!
__________________
Word of the day "balderdash" 2720 John Deere w/200cx loader /62d mower. 620i John Deere XUV gator hyd dump. 2006 660 Yamaha Rhino full skids Maxxis bighorns. 1987 Suzuki Samurai (3 inch lift srings,doetsch shocks,super swampers,8k smitty winch,lockrite lockers) |
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#40 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Willis, Texas
Posts: 801
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Defective,
Okay, I'm flattered. The PHD as it gets deeper, wants to angle a little. But a little wiggle of the control lever and it is straight. Unlike a 3PH digger that requires you moving the tractor. I used to rebuild wrecked helicopters. I made all kinds of sheetmetal parts for them. Mudcat, Thanks! Sometimes when it is raining, I go out there and sit in a lawn chair and listen to the rain hit the metal roof. Some day I want to build a log home. It will have a metal roof!Eddie, I am honored you are impressed. Coming from the master lake builder makes me feel good. I was going to just run the digger with the remote and run lines all the way back to the digger mounted on the BH bucket, but another TBNer suggested the swivel knuckle mount and the quick disconnects. That saved a lot of pain running dedicated lines for the PHD. Terry, The auger can be laid almost flat on the floor of the trailer. It would lay flat if I would have added more distance where the swivel knuckle was welded up. It just hangs and swivels when the tractor is moving. It has a heavy spring that helps, but the weight of the 12 auger stops a lot of swing. It plumbs by itself when the tractor is not moving. hugs, Brandi |
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