Compact telehandler

   / Compact telehandler #241  
A Little Pushover Job For The Compact Telehandler. Part Two

Retracted the boom and put the stump bucket in the root ball:
P6180030.JPG


Lifted and extended, the trunk is all the way over :thumbsup::
P6180033.JPG


Went around to the side and broke the rest of the roots loose:
P6180041.JPG


Balanced it:
P6180045.JPG


P6180047.JPG


Took it to the burn pile:
P6180048.JPG


P6180050.JPG
 
   / Compact telehandler #242  
Re: A Little Pushover Job For The Compact Telehandler. Part Two

Took it to the burn pile:

...and another happy ending :drink: (it's always a good thing when a task is successfully completed without incident)

& Thanks for sharing the pics
 
   / Compact telehandler #243  
A Big Pushover Job For The Compact Telehandler. Chapter One

Sharing more pictures.

This big oak has had less live branches every year. Hear is a picture from five years ago:

P7030002.JPG


This year it didn't have any leaves on it anywhere:

P6170008.JPG



Put the stump bucket on the V417, raised the boom to 45 degrees and put the stump bucket against the trunk:

P6170012.JPG



Got in the cab (FOPS), extended the boom about six inches and saw the crack in the ground:

P6170014.JPG



Reached in and extended some more:

P6170021.JPG


Roots are dead, it is going over easy:

P6170028.JPG


P6170035.JPG


P6170032.JPG


P6170038.JPG
 
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   / Compact telehandler #244  
That's crazy that you could push over a tree that big with a piece of equipment that size. Thanks for the pics.

Rob
 
   / Compact telehandler #246  
It always amazes me how few large roots many large trees have, and how they stood for so long. Granted, that one was dying for a few years, but still, it isn't much, considering the wind load on them.
 
   / Compact telehandler #247  
It always amazes me how few large roots many large trees have, and how they stood for so long. Granted, that one was dying for a few years, but still, it isn't much, considering the wind load on them.

Once the tree dies, the roots start decaying quickly. That’s why they’re easy to push over.

IMG_0148.jpg
 
   / Compact telehandler #250  
Doesn't change what I said?

didn't mean to imply that. It's just that even the live ones he's pushed over didn't have as large of roots as one would expect. I used to push over oaks in our sandy soil with my IH2500b. While nowhere near as large as the ones the OP did, there still weren't that many roots, much to my surprise. It's hard to imagine that they'd stay up during wind storms, yet they do. Heck, they even crack off during tornados here, rather than get uprooted. I'm guessing they have millions of small roots to gather that much water VS the typical large ones that one would expect to see.
 

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