IslandTractor
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2005
- Messages
- 15,802
- Location
- Prudence Island, RI
- Tractor
- 2007 Kioti DK40se HST, Woods BH
I agree that someone doing commercial quantities of firewood would be best off with a wide grapple. Cleaning up construction sites is another example where wider is indeed better. However, there are convenient work arounds that require pretty simple changes in process to accommodate a narrow grapple. For example, instead of cutting logs into 16" lengths and then loading them into a grapple for transport to the splitter, how about cutting logs to eight foot lengths and transporting them that way for finer cutting right at the splitter? I'd imagine you could carry even more in one load that way than you could with a wide grapple holding 16" lengths as overhang is no issue so long as you could drive out of the woods.
Still, I do see your point. Most of us are not using grapples for commercial firewood quantities or construction but rather cleaning up land and doing a variety of grappling tasks. The bottom line is that any grapple is better than no grapple and that to my knowledge no one on TBN with a wide grapple has traded down and no one with a narrow light duty grapple has traded up. Everyone loves their grapple. You cannot say that for tractors or other implements by and large.
Still, I do see your point. Most of us are not using grapples for commercial firewood quantities or construction but rather cleaning up land and doing a variety of grappling tasks. The bottom line is that any grapple is better than no grapple and that to my knowledge no one on TBN with a wide grapple has traded down and no one with a narrow light duty grapple has traded up. Everyone loves their grapple. You cannot say that for tractors or other implements by and large.