Travelover
Elite Member
Travelover- Is that a "Sketch-Up rendition? ~Scotty
Yes and not too good a one, either
Travelover- Is that a "Sketch-Up rendition? ~Scotty
Actually that side to side piece of angle that the receiver is mounted to is in torsion when there is a downward force on the hook insert. The way to strengthen it is to box in the angle iron so it is a closed triangle from a side view. Or add a second piece of angle to form a square tube under the receiver. Before on the left, after on the right.
Adding a 1/4" plate on TOP like hollow suggested isnt going to do as much for torsional strength as boxing in the angle.
Actually that would be stronger than the triangle method and would provide more welding surface area to the receiver tube with less welding than two pieces of angle welded together to make square tubing.
IMO as long as your welds are good no need for further reinforcement of the receiver tube. It is already the strongest link and would be the last part to fail in a destructive test. You could probably rip the whole loader off the machine with using the receiver as the attachment point.
Not the best place to be winching from either IMO, loader is not designed for that force geometry.
I've got receivers on everything from my buckets to my quick hitches, never seen one fail in the CUT applications.
I have a set of forks but don't see a need there for a receiver myself, but if it something you will use, then that's great.
JB
A 6,000 lb trailer should only have 600 lb of tongue weight. How would that lift the rear tires? A small CUT has a 1200+ lb lift capacity on the FEL. 600 lb weight of a trailer tongue is well below the max lift of the FEL.