welderboy14
Silver Member
You're getting closer. I'm eager to see some shots of it in action.
me too
You're getting closer. I'm eager to see some shots of it in action.
the thing i was woundering was does it move vary fast![]()
Hey, thats a pretty nice backhoe, i wish i could buildone but im not a very good welder. ah well, maybe some day ill learn...
How do you plan on keeping the contraption from moving when you are using it? I assume you will be constructing some kind of stabilizer arrangement that lowers down to the ground.
I should think that the amount of time and labor that you have into this you could have rented or hired a backhoe several times over.
I have made make or buy decisions my whole life. When I was young, like our 14 year old friend, I made a lot of stuff, no money. Eventually I got a job and had less time and a little more money. I still made a lot of things. A live in girlfriend left one time and I built a little bulldozer almost from scratch. Took 2 years. Then I got a better job, more money less time. Then I married a woman with 3 kids, best thing I ever did and had no time and less money. The kids finally went on their way and then I had a little more time and a little more money. Those were tough decision years. I bought some stuff. I used to buy used ,really used , and fix it up but I sort of gave that up when I had more money and less time as my job increased in responsibility. Now I am retired , a little money and and a lot of time but I cannot keep at it all day, not full speed anyway. And now there are grandchildren. I feel less time coming. I still wrestle with make or buy. I bought a new tractor 2 years ago but now am thinking hard about making some sort of logging winch thing on a carry all base.
So it keeps going around and around. I am the proudest of the stuff I have made.
There are two different categories of "make or buy" decisions, business and home hobbyist. In a business situation where it all comes down to dollars and the bottom line you have to count the time spent building and all of the materials and maintenance costs, etc. Most often a business situation yields the decision to buy vs. build.
In a home hobby situation, the time spent building almost counts as an asset vs. a liability. I figure if I wasn't out in the shop tinkering most weekends I'd be off spending money on some other entertainment like golfing or skiing.
I guess the short version of what I'm trying to say is this: Building something doesn't have to make business sense in order to be worth it in a home hobby situation.