plowhog
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2015
- Messages
- 3,405
- Location
- North. NV, North. CA
- Tractor
- Massey 1710 / 1758, Ventrac 4500Y / TD9
I agree. Nice job. Did you do the fab work yourself?
LOL. Just as I pictured it.
I'd recommend renting something to clean that up with instead of taking a brand new tractor into that mess. A tracked skid steer with a grapple would do wonders with all the small debris as opposed to tearing up tractor tires. An excavator with a thumb might also be worth considering.
What's the saying...when your favorite tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Well a skid steer is your hammer.
You would argue with a 50 year old stump for days to try and make your point. **** man. What's the saying...when your favorite tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Well a skid steer is your hammer.
I have a GC1710, same as the OP. I also have a Cat Excavator and i choose the Massey in the woods. I just back up to the mess of logs, chain a log to the backhoe bucket with a clevis on bucket fully extended. I then pull the arm in and the log comes out of the mess of logs. I do this until I can cut the log into manageable lengths with out the mess around me and then pick up the log with the bucket and forks and move it to where I need it.
It can be done and has been done with a tractor.
No. I can weld, but it's not always pretty, and I won't do it where safety is a major consideration. I hope to get good enough to do that stuff one of these days, but I'm not there yet.
A fab shop just a couple miles down the road from me did this and the belly pan. The guy is a real artist at this stuff. Not only is he a VERY good welder, he's great at thinking through design features: including porthole where needed to access grease zerks, making the belly pan in two pieces (the smaller front section is held on by two bolts in the front, and via tongue & groove with the main section in the rear. Remove 2 bolts, drop the small front section, and I have easy access to the oil filter, and the piece removed is light enough to handle without a jack - despite being made from 1/2" plate). On all the fab work he's done for me, the guy includes features I hadn't even thought to ask for.