Backhoe Ripper

/ Backhoe Ripper
  • Thread Starter
#41  
Looks like a great tool ! Lots of commercial excavation companies use rippers, not just for trees but just about anything where you need to bundle the force.

Just wondering: how many roots are left in the ground, and arent you afraid your shop foundation will settle when they rot ?

My father cut an oak at the end of the driveway when the mill in town, who brought hog feed in 50kg bags on a haywagon drawn by a 15hp Deutz, closed, and he had to order in bulk at a larger cooperation, whose trucks couldnt make the turn. Say somewhere in the 70s.

When i was a kid we layd pavers around it, so the top of the stump was flat with the pavers although it was still a hump..

In my early twenties the stump started sinking, and i paved pavers over it. Right now, theres a dimple in the street.

Off course this was a 2 feet oak stump, not some flywood roots, but i personally dont like the idea of decomposing organic material under a foundation: We always dig foundations at least 2 feet untill subsoil, though at my brother in laws house, on an old river arm, they dug 6 feet before finding subsoil without organic matter. Though we live in a river delta, no hard place in miles around
Minimal roots are left, I will still be grading down slightly which will remove most of the other roots.
The footers will still be 16in depth. Most of the roots will pull up while removing them.


As you can see, the rootballs are pretty complete.
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/ Backhoe Ripper #42  
You built a great ripper. This is the kind of attachment everyone should use to dig out stumps, roots and concrete slabs. You get all the power out of your backhoe and it works much better then a bucket
 
/ Backhoe Ripper
  • Thread Starter
#43  
You built a great ripper. This is the kind of attachment everyone should use to dig out stumps, roots and concrete slabs. You get all the power out of your backhoe and it works much better then a bucket
Thank you, that means a lot coming from someone of your fab skills!

They really allow a smaller backhoe do bigger work quicker when it comes to stumps, and less ground disturbance.

This is a 28" red oak I just took down, took maybe 1hr to get it down. Root ball had about 2yrds of soil attached to it! Had to use the ripper to knock enough of the dirt off just so I could roll the stump oit of the hole.
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/ Backhoe Ripper #44  
I've designed and got cut parts for a ripper with similar design a while ago but still haven't found free time to put it together. Your posts just reminded me that I should because there is piece of brothers farm land I have to clear
 
/ Backhoe Ripper
  • Thread Starter
#45  
I've designed and got cut parts for a ripper with similar design a while ago but still haven't found free time to put it together. Your posts just reminded me that I should because there is piece of brothers farm land I have to clear
Looking forward to seeing it get built!

I have a number of fab projects I still want to do, I just haven't had time to complete them.
The ripper and thumb were moved to the top of the list due to needing them for clearing the land of my new shop build.

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/ Backhoe Ripper #46  

Update on the ripper.
I am clearing for a new shop and have a number of trees to take down and some old stumps to remove, it has been working great ripping the roots out so i can push the trees over.

I have about 8 trees left, one is a large red oak that'll probably put up a fight.


Notes on it so far:
I'm really glad I used Hardox for the shank, it's taking a beating and only shows minimal wear so far. I'm really glad I went with a replaceable point, the amount of wear on it already makes me think it was a good idea.

Overall I'm very happy with its performance and don't think there is anything on the design I would change after using it for about 12hrs.View attachment 4189540View attachment 4189541View attachment 4189542
I am interested in building a similar attachment for my L48 with BT1100 backhoe, and have a few questions about your build. It is obvious to me that your metal fabrication skills and experience are far more advanced than mine. Your finished product looks great.

1. I am planning on laminating my tooth also. I bought 3 pieces of 1/4" plate, but I am having second thoughts about if a total of 3/4" of tooth thickness is appropriate for the power rating of my machine.Since I am just a stupid retired carpenter and not an engineer, I would like to have a better feel for if 4 layers of plate might be warranted or not for my machine. Can you provide power rating details on your machine for me to compare with my L48?

2. As I noted earlier, my skills are not nearly as advanced as yours are, so I would like to absorb some of your experience before I totally screw mine up. Can you describe the general welding processes you used?

I would really like my project to look as professionally fabricated as yours, though I am sure that it will not. I mainly just want it to be stout enough for my needs.

Thank you very much for posting your build,
Doug
 
/ Backhoe Ripper #47  
I am interested in building a similar attachment for my L48 with BT1100 backhoe, and have a few questions about your build. It is obvious to me that your metal fabrication skills and experience are far more advanced than mine. Your finished product looks great.

1. I am planning on laminating my tooth also. I bought 3 pieces of 1/4" plate, but I am having second thoughts about if a total of 3/4" of tooth thickness is appropriate for the power rating of my machine.Since I am just a stupid retired carpenter and not an engineer, I would like to have a better feel for if 4 layers of plate might be warranted or not for my machine. Can you provide power rating details on your machine for me to compare with my L48?

2. As I noted earlier, my skills are not nearly as advanced as yours are, so I would like to absorb some of your experience before I totally screw mine up. Can you describe the general welding processes you used?

I would really like my project to look as professionally fabricated as yours, though I am sure that it will not. I mainly just want it to be stout enough for my needs.

Thank you very much for posting your build,
Doug
Doug,

I run a KX40 root/ frost ripper with a 3/4" shank and 26" long on a M59 with no problems. Laminating three 1/4" thick slabs by continuous weld up the working and back edges will prevent wedging something between the laminations and spreading them. Your L48 and my M59 do not have enough curl power to bend a 3/4" thick blade.

I also have a 1" thick root/ frost ripper on my LX80 ( 20K Lb machine ) and have never had issues

Have fun removing stumps. Its the only way to work. Second pic is M59 pulling a oak stump
 

Attachments

  • Two trees one stump.jpg
    Two trees one stump.jpg
    9.3 MB · Views: 39
  • Ripper & Oak stump.jpg
    Ripper & Oak stump.jpg
    7.3 MB · Views: 26
/ Backhoe Ripper #48  
Great build TMGT

Going to make fabricating one for my Ford TLB a priority once I get the plasma table up and functional.

Also possibly thinking about a sideways facing attachment blade add on, I have heard being able to swipe under the roots can really help breaking the stump free, maybe.
 
/ Backhoe Ripper #49  
Doug,

I run a KX40 root/ frost ripper with a 3/4" shank and 26" long on a M59 with no problems. Laminating three 1/4" thick slabs by continuous weld up the working and back edges will prevent wedging something between the laminations and spreading them. Your L48 and my M59 do not have enough curl power to bend a 3/4" thick blade.

I also have a 1" thick root/ frost ripper on my LX80 ( 20K Lb machine ) and have never had issues

Have fun removing stumps. Its the only way to work. Second pic is M59 pulling a oak stump
M59,

Thank you for the response. Your feedback reinforces my original thoughts. I will stay with my original plan.

Thanks again,
Doug
 
/ Backhoe Ripper #50  
M59,

Thank you for the response. Your feedback reinforces my original thoughts. I will stay with my original plan.

Thanks again,
Doug
Another pic. This ash tree had 3-4 large side roots and massive tape root. This was before the KX 80 was part of the toys to play with so the M59 wrestled with this one for 4 hours. Had to completely undermine this stump before it could be broken free. I could have parked a volkswagon beetle in that hole.

I suggest you add a replaceable tooth to the ripper since some soils are extremely abrasive. My NC property has a rock layer about 2-4 feet under the surface that is really tough on leading edges.
 

Attachments

  • M59 with Root Ripper.jpg
    M59 with Root Ripper.jpg
    8.2 MB · Views: 29
  • Stump out- Huge tap root.jpg
    Stump out- Huge tap root.jpg
    5.8 MB · Views: 26
  • Stone on property- bank.jpg
    Stone on property- bank.jpg
    6.9 MB · Views: 26

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