2manyrocks
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2007
- Messages
- 8,386
Starts to look like adding a ROPS could be a good investment?
Starts to look like adding a ROPS could be a good investment?
Maybe you need the other style low profile machine. I haven't tipped one over yet.
Good job on the repair. Remember grease every 8 hours.
I use mine on the same type of terrain in New England. The Power trac 1430 and 1460 type are the best made for side hills and stability. I have a Ryan's rotating log grapple and pull trees on side hills with the arms raised and haven't tipped it yet, thank God!I have mine out on the mountainsides here in north east Ga and on uneven terrain. The times i have turned it over i am usually driving over a old log and the tire falls into a hole covered by leafs unseen by the operator (me) always on the down hill side. Does not happen often. But it comes with the terrain, i usually am taking my time and being careful but on occasions it happens. i’m usually on property clearing trees for people that you can’t take bobcats, or anything else down through there because of the terrain and the slope. Sometimes i can only traverse the terrain by going straight up and straight back down becuase the slope is too great to drive across.
Wow! When you wrote
"...I am kinda rough on this little machine..."
I was kind of thinking "who owns a PT that isn't using it hard?" Dropping a PT on its side definitely qualifies as "rough" in my book. More to the point, rolling would put a great deal of torsional stress on the link on the roll over pivot.
I like what your machinist did for you, and the price is wonderful. If it breaks again, I might consider braces from the ends of the roll over bar to the outer ends of arms on the roll over bar for a little more lateral bracing.
Hopefully, you won't roll your machine again. Over the years, I have lost a couple of neighbors to tractor rolls. So, I don't take them lightly. I've dropped my 1445 wheel into unseen ground squirrel holes, and it definitely gets my adrenaline going. If you are doing lots of slope work, have you thought about getting a 425 or 1860?
All the best,
Peter