Another Unnecessary Tractor Death

   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #1  

JDNineNinety

Bronze Member
Joined
Aug 5, 2004
Messages
72
Location
Hernando, Ms. 38632
Tractor
John Deere 990 2-wheel drive
I live in the small town of Hernando, Mississippi. We had a
florist-landscaper (74 years old) who was hogging on an old
International tractor with no ROPS. He was hogging on an
incline and it rolled and killed him. How many times have
we all heard this? If you don't have ROPS on your tractor
go to your local welder and have one made for it. It very
well may save your life. ALSO get some seatbelts fitted.
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #2  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( If you don't have ROPS on your tractor
go to your local welder and have one made for it )</font>

As good as that sounds.. it is actually bad advice.

A non-certified rops would give you a false sense of security.. and might actually lead you to do something unsafe.

A welder or fabricator at best would probably make a set of 'roll'bars.. not a rops or fops structure.. which have been engineered and designed, and certified/listed with UL to perform to a certain spec. Besides.. if a welder made it and sold it.. you could sue him if it didn't operate correctly in many cases.

Better advice is to traverse slopes up and down.. not side to side..

Soundguy
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #3  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( A non-certified rops would give you a false sense of security.. and might actually lead you to do something unsafe.
)</font>
I totally agree with you Chris. ROPS are designed especially for the tractor on which it is installed, with very particular stress points etc. A mere roll bar is about all a welder would put on, and there's no telling how it would hold up in a rollover. Imagine being belted in, thinking the roll over would work, but it doesn't, and you're strapped in while the tractor rolls over and crushes you. Quite possible without a certified ROPS. John
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #4  
I'd say if there is no such thing as a certified roll bar for the old tractor, then have one made that should do the trick. It might save your life, but don't trust your life with it. You shouldn't be too careless with a store-bought ROPS, nor should you be careless with no ROPS, but something designed by a good welder with what should be enough strength to survive a roll is a lot better than nothing, in my opinion. And seatbelts are must too of course.

We're not jumping out of airplanes with makeshift parachutes here, nobody plans to roll their tractor.
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #6  
My neighbor had some work done on his driveway this weekend and when they brought the D5 dozer it slid off the side trailer and flipped onto its side. They got a big loader , flipped it back on its tracts, checked the oils and drove it away.

If it didn't have a ROPS cab the operator may have been killed instead of just a underwear change.

It is better to over build if you can't buy a ROPS for the older machines.

Dave in NH
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #7  
John..... I believe that we will have to differ on this one. A competent welder would know how to build a roll over protection device that would be as good as any factory built one, but wouldn't have the same certification for obvious reasons. I have a friend that builds and races midget cars. He builds all his own frames and cages. I have seen his cars after he has rolled one and every time, he has come out of it unscathed. The only time that I can remember him getting hurt was when another car threw a piece off of the rear tire and it hit him in the shoulder. All of his cars are made of 1 1/2" & 2" steel tubing. I wouldn't call them pretty, but they sure are safe.
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #8  
No offense to the people that think you can tack a cage to a tractor that was not designed for it.. but you are forgetting one BIG issue... the tractor itself. Even if the roll bar can handle the roll/load.. the suports it is bolted to may not be able to.

On most setups.. the rear axle trumpets are the mounting point for the rops.. Not all old tractors had rops in mind.. some did. Thos that didn't may have the welded up rops work fine.. but have the tractor break along an axle trumpet as it was not designed for that side load.

For instance.. the for N series, though supplied with no rops, did have backwards support for it on the axle trumpet, and there are certified rops available for fords back thru 1939.

Other tractors.. for instance .. like some of the cubs have pretty wimpy axle trumpets... It would be a gamble to see whether the axle trumpet would hold the side load.

I've seen grey market tractors that also use a plate around the rear casting, above the pto as a mount point for a rops.. I've seen that same setup with the rear cover torn off on a roll as well... I would bet the operator didn't experience much protection in that situation.. especially if he was seatbelted in. Course.. all the mechanic had to do was toss a new rear cover on.. wash the blood off the seat, and sell it again? right?

I can't speak for everywhere.. but around here.. if you walk into any big welding shop and ask for rops / rollbar.. etc.. most of them don't want the laibility. I guess you could get a back yard welder to do it.. but I would want to see his homeowners umbrella limit before I paid him...

Either get a certified rops and seatbelt and use them.. or don't.. but be safe and aware in both cases, and you will stand a better chance.

Soundguy
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #9  
Something is better than nothing.

I believe that a FABRICATOR is what is needed in an after market ROPS installation. There is a BIG difference between the two.

web page
 
   / Another Unnecessary Tractor Death #10  
I have to come down on the side of the fabricators, here. Obviously, if you take your tractor to the local guy who considers welding up some lawn furniture to be fabricating, you're probably not going to be safe if he builds a roll bar.

But, as Junkman mentioned, every area has someone who builds roll cages for race cars. Frankly, I look at the ROPS protection on my tractor and burst out laughing, compared to the roll cages we've had in our race cars.

Any competent cage builder is going to look at the structure of the tractor and, if he can't find something solid enough for a mount, will start whereever it is solid, and fabricate from there.

I also have to come down on the side of "something is better than nothing." It has been suggested that this is a mistake, because a faulty design might inspire false confidence. All I can say is, anyone who gains enough confidence from their factory-designed, "certified" ROPS to ignore the danger is even dumber than the guy with no ROPS at all.
 

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