Which grapple?

   / Which grapple? #51  
Seems like a really heavy grapple for a B21. Rated for about 4 times your lift capacity.
 
   / Which grapple? #52  
Seems like a really heavy grapple for a B21. Rated for about 4 times your lift capacity.

As far as its lift rating yes but all forks are rated fairly high, as far as its weight I am guessing the forks alone are around 300 lbs and with the lid it is 450 lbs. 300 lbs would still give me a fair amount of lift remaining from the 926 lb rating.

I am not seeing much selection in the market for light weight fork grapples.
 
Last edited:
   / Which grapple? #53  
As far as its lift rating yes but all forks are rated fairly high, as far as its weight I am guessing the forks alone are around 300 lbs and with the lid it is 450 lbs. 300 lbs would still give me a fair amount of lift remaining from the 926 lb rating.

I am not seeing much selection in the market for light weight fork grapples.

How about just adding an upper lid to your standard bucket and then using removable forks on the standard bucket. I wouldn’t do that if you were moving lots of wood but I wouldn’t use a little B tractor to move lots of wood either. A bucket grapple is maybe half as efficient as a full grapple but is way cheaper and is always mounted.
 
   / Which grapple? #54  
i think it would be useful to point out that virtually no tractor of less than 150hp would come close to needing a grapple made of AR400 much less 1" tines. That type of grapple is appropriate for LARGE skidsteers. There is no 50hp tractor on earth that really needs more than 3/8" mild steel for a grapple. Think of what the standard bucket for any tractor is made of. No need to go much beyond that type of steel for a grapple. A bucketful of sand will weigh as much or more than any load a grapple will lift. Think also about a tractor style FEL: NOT designed or built for ramming/bulldozing. Tractor FELs are for lifting/loading and are therefore relatively long and thin. Bulldozer arms are short and stubby for a reason.

That's absolutely true, but I was asking Xfaxman about his grapples and grapple preferences. He (and I) are using a telehandler. Telehandlers have substantially more lift than most tractors, in the neighborhood of 5500-6000#. I have ~175 acres of pine forest to manage. Every windstorm I loose a dozen trees or so, not to mention trees that die standing, that I'd like to push over. The heavy duty graples using 1/2 A572 Grade 50 steel don't seem to be all that much less (indeed the wicked grapple is a few hundred more) than these using 1-inch AR400. If they are the same price, and my machine will handle the weight (also not more than 1-200# difference), I think buying the heavier duty grapple makes more sense.
 
   / Which grapple? #55  
How about just adding an upper lid to your standard bucket and then using removable forks on the standard bucket. I wouldn’t do that if you were moving lots of wood but I wouldn’t use a little B tractor to move lots of wood either. A bucket grapple is maybe half as efficient as a full grapple but is way cheaper and is always mounted.
I thought of that but the net weight of the existing bucket + (either or both) upper lid and removeable forks seems to me to be more than the mid state fork grapple setup. Also, the removeable forks stick out from the bottom edge of the bucket, pushing the center of the load out about 3 feet, reducing my effective lift considerably. I have larger tractors up to 60 HP with grapples and forks that would be perfect but not on the parcel I live on, they are an hour away. The B21 stays at the house and I can build the firewood pallets to match whatever the B21 can handle.
 
   / Which grapple? #56  
Is the width more important, or the opening?

--------------------------------------

It depends on you will be using it for.

For me it is the bigger opening.
 
   / Which grapple? #57  
That's absolutely true, but I was asking Xfaxman about his grapples and grapple preferences. He (and I) are using a telehandler. Telehandlers have substantially more lift than most tractors, in the neighborhood of 5500-6000#. I have ~175 acres of pine forest to manage. Every windstorm I loose a dozen trees or so, not to mention trees that die standing, that I'd like to push over. The heavy duty graples using 1/2 A572 Grade 50 steel don't seem to be all that much less (indeed the wicked grapple is a few hundred more) than these using 1-inch AR400. If they are the same price, and my machine will handle the weight (also not more than 1-200# difference), I think buying the heavier duty grapple makes more sense.

Yeah, I wasn’t thinking telehandlers or big skidsteers in my reply. Still, one inch AR400 seems like overkill even for a telehandler with 6000 lbs lift. A telehandler lifts it doesn’t ram and it isn’t really as massive as a big skid steer. And, remember that both net lift capacity and the weight of your wallet drop with heavier grapples.
 
   / Which grapple? #58  
EXACTLY as Xfaxman says. Width & opening will depend upon use. Mine is 50" wide and opens 50". More than sufficient for the largest pine on the property and more than enough for any rock I want to move. I have no brush but do use the grapple to clean up trimmed limbs from large fallen pines.

Actually, because of the WIDE selection to choose from, you should not have to sacrifice either width or opening.
 
   / Which grapple? #59  
EXACTLY as Xfaxman says. Width & opening will depend upon use. Mine is 50" wide and opens 50". More than sufficient for the largest pine on the property and more than enough for any rock I want to move. I have no brush but do use the grapple to clean up trimmed limbs from large fallen pines.

Actually, because of the WIDE selection to choose from, you should not have to sacrifice either width or opening.

Good to hear, thanks!

Another question regarding tines. I like the long bottom style rather than the clamb-shell style. Most of the long bottom grapples have a tube going across the front, maybe 8-10 inches back from the tine tips. (like Xfaxman's wide grapple) Another type, has thicker tines with gussets, that don't have that front brace (like Xfaxman's narrower grapple). I can see where the front brace would make it hard to penetrate brush or hay. Has anyone had any experience / problems with this?

I saw another post where they describe rolling the grapple over and grabbing from on top, so maybe it's not that big of a deal.
 
   / Which grapple? #60  
.... And, remember that both net lift capacity and the weight of your wallet drop with heavier grapples.

That's for darn sure! Hardest problem for me is knowing how much is enough. I bought some light duty crap equipment when I first got started and regretted it because after I tore it up I had to buy the more expensive stuff anyhow. Main reason I looked at these was that many of the 6ft grapples for 75hp+ tractors are in the $3k range and these are the same (at least there are some that are the same - their top line stuff is more). Decisions, decisions...
 
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2021 ALLMAND BROS, INC. NIGHT LITE TOWER (A50854)
2021 ALLMAND BROS...
2018 CATERPILLAR 249D TRACKED SKID (A51222)
2018 CATERPILLAR...
2004 Range Rover HSE SUV (A48082)
2004 Range Rover...
UNUSED Galvanized Wire Rope with G70 Hooks (A50860)
UNUSED Galvanized...
2019 FORD F-650 SUPER DUTY BOX TRUCK (A51406)
2019 FORD F-650...
2022 Mack MD Rollback Truck (A50323)
2022 Mack MD...
 
Top