Eric the Orange
New member
Firstly, I am new to the forum so I realize this is likely an old idea. I couldn't find anything similar but my 'search' skills might need refining.
Also, I'm not sure if this qualifies as a 'build' as there is precious little building involved.
But, it works.
It's my simple, cheap solution to the slippery wet ice we get on our gravel road from freezing rain, winter thaws, and now the spring melt.
Materials: One 4X4. Two 6" C-clamps. A handful of 1/2 X 5" lag screws.
Incredibly technical and detailed instructions: Insert lag screws through 4X4. Clamp to bucket.
Operation: for me it works best if I tip the bucket 'almost' vertical, then drag backwards in the float position.
I am a little surprised the C-clamps are adequate (note that I didn't even take the tags off so I could return them) but, so far, they hold just fine.



So, Mr. Moneybags, go buy your fancy-pants tooth bar or hoity-toity harrow attachment if you must. But for the 2 or 3 times a year I need to not slip on my *** or pull a car out of the snowbank, this little fix does the trick.
Also, I'm not sure if this qualifies as a 'build' as there is precious little building involved.
But, it works.
It's my simple, cheap solution to the slippery wet ice we get on our gravel road from freezing rain, winter thaws, and now the spring melt.
Materials: One 4X4. Two 6" C-clamps. A handful of 1/2 X 5" lag screws.
Incredibly technical and detailed instructions: Insert lag screws through 4X4. Clamp to bucket.
Operation: for me it works best if I tip the bucket 'almost' vertical, then drag backwards in the float position.
I am a little surprised the C-clamps are adequate (note that I didn't even take the tags off so I could return them) but, so far, they hold just fine.



So, Mr. Moneybags, go buy your fancy-pants tooth bar or hoity-toity harrow attachment if you must. But for the 2 or 3 times a year I need to not slip on my *** or pull a car out of the snowbank, this little fix does the trick.
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