Fun with Stumps

   / Fun with Stumps #21  
21" - yes you can do it. Take your time, and you can always did a slope going down to the stump so you can slide it out and can work at getting the deep roots. It will take a while and you can do it safely with some care and thought.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #22  
Where can I get one of those rippers? I found a bxpanded one, but it looks a little lightweight.

Maybe someone here on TBN knows who makes a good ripper tooth. It's a handy tool, but I don't know where to go to buy one. The one in the picture looks like one my friend made and is typical. I don't have one myself but he and I have the same model tractor... :). All the good single tooth rippers I've seen have been custom made either made at home or at some metal-working shop.

The hard part about having a ripper tooth built is getting it made to fit the bucket pins on the backhoe. Those pins are not standard or even close. There are many different geometries for connecting buckets to backhoes, and that includes both pin on and QA types. So getting the "attachment ears" just right is the big problem. Get the ears right, and after that, most any welder can make up the tooth part.

For the Kubota TLBs, a set of backhoe bucket attaching ears can be ordered... or at least they could be a few years ago and I guess they still do. A few years ago Kubota sold just the weldable ears alone as a set of two specifically for people who want to make up a special bucket. I forget the part number but that friend ordered a set to make himself a ripper for his M59. As I recall, a set of the two ears required was quite expensive....several hundred dollars each at least. The Kubota QA backhoe bucket is such an exact fit that when he went to make up a ripper, my buddy decided ordering those ears from Kubota was worth the price.

If I ever see a nice ripper tooth that fits I'll get it. I might just get the tooth and order the ears. Till then I'll just borrow the one my friend made. Maybe someday talk him into making another.
rScotty
 
   / Fun with Stumps
  • Thread Starter
#23  
If I ever see a nice ripper tooth that fits I'll get it. I might just get the tooth and order the ears. Till then I'll just borrow the one my friend made. Maybe someday talk him into making another.
rScotty

I think I found where the one in the picture is from. Bro-Tek

They dont make one for my hoe stock, so its a custom for me, but maybe they have yours.
 
   / Fun with Stumps
  • Thread Starter
#24  
I had to stop work today for equipment inspection. I got through with only a minor warning for it still looking too clean.
 

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   / Fun with Stumps #25  
A sign of not enough mud, might as well put some wax on it, keep it new as long as you can.....
 
   / Fun with Stumps #26  
I bought a DR stump grinder for about $2,000 7-8 years ago to tackle the stumps. It grinds them 6" below ground level, the rest will eventually rot away.

I can hire a stump grinder guy for 10 bucks an inch. 2 grand gets me a lot of inches and if it's real big and I'm industrious, I borrow my buddy's Volvo excavator.

If they aren't too big, I cut them off about 10 feet above the ground, choke the top with a stout chain and run it to my drawbar on my M9 and pop the entire thing out of the ground like a cork.

Never owned a tractor backhoe and don't want one. Useless implement in my view.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #27  
I had to stop work today for equipment inspection. I got through with only a minor warning for it still looking too clean.

Cute little tractor. Lay off the stumps with that backhoe, it isn't built for that kind of abuse. Something will break eventually.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #28  
   / Fun with Stumps #29  
This is fun with stumps. Works better on the 4 barrel ripper but works ok on 2 barrel.
 

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   / Fun with Stumps #30  
Many years ago I had some of my ancient Ponderosa pine selectively logged off my 80 acres. I learned a valuable lesson. I spent the better part of two weeks digging out a gigantic pine stump - by hand. Only to find that my Ford 1700 4WD would not pull it out of the hole. So in 2010, with my brand new Kubota M6040, I went down and tried to pull the stump out - no joy there either. What a joke - all four wheels were digging, spinning - my big nylon tie down strap just stretched - the stump didn't budge.

"A man has got to know his limitations" - - Clint Eastwood.
 

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