AndyMA
Elite Member
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2000
- Messages
- 3,714
- Location
- Windham County, Conn
- Tractor
- Ford 2120 , Kubota MX5200 , Deere X748SE. 1956 Economy Tractor
It’s all she’s got. Over 2000 pounds
MX5200 landPride Grapple
I agree, looks like he has a backhoe on the back.What COUNTERBALANCE did you have mounted on the TPH?
Are the rear tires of your MX inflated with air or filled with liquid?
Loaded with RimGuard plus the backhoe. No issue with back lifting. Just ran out of lift capacity. Got stump in first picture about 2 inches off the ground.What COUNTERBALANCE did you have mounted on the TPH?
Are the rear tires of your MX inflated with air or filled with liquid?
GRRRRR!!!View attachment 797024View attachment 797025View attachment 797026View attachment 797027
It’s all she’s got. Over 2000 pounds
MX5200 landPride Grapple
It takes a while for pictures to load here. When the first started, I thought that you were pulling the stump; and was dually impressed.Loaded with RimGuard plus the backhoe. No issue with back lifting. Just ran out of lift capacity. Got stump in first picture about 2 inches off the ground.
Andy
Picture 3 is a different log. Probably half as heavy as the stumpReferring to pic 3, you'll get a little more lift if you raise the FEL and adjust the grapple angle so the stump is closer to the grill guard.
Used to be size limits on pics here. If there are any now, they are huge. I'm on Fiber Optics Internet and sometimes pics load very slow because they are gigantic.It takes a while for pictures to load here. When the first started, I thought that you were pulling the stump; and was dually impressed.
I still am, actually, those were some heavy buckets.
Lay it down, lower open grapple over it, clamp, roll back all the way, then lift. Gets the load much closer to the tractor.Referring to pic 3, you'll get a little more lift if you raise the FEL and adjust the grapple angle so the stump is closer to the grill guard.
The picture from the front is a much smaller log than the stumpSure it looks impressive.
Especially considering you had time to get off the tractor run around front and take a picture.
I dislike running anything at it's limit.
Stuff tends to break less last longer below the limit.
That also can work with rocks, although you will need to be more patient. When I was a kid the people up the road from our camp had a huge boulder next to their house. If I recall, the house had been build so closely to it that we could barely squeeze by... and I was a lot smaller when I was 10 than I am now. Every night they would start a fire next to it, the neighbors would come over for cocktails and they would burn until bedtime. After it got hot somebody would take a few swings with a sledgehammer, and break chunks off. It took a couple of years, but eventually my father hooked onto the last piece of that boulder with his Willys pickup and dragged it off.Id prolly figure out a way to split that big trunk and/or build a nice big fire around it and have it as the center of a new brush pile. Might take all season but fire gets rid of most stuff like that. You're gonna move it but its still there and will outlive you. Burn burn burn