paulsharvey
Super Member
Will do, as long as it turns out ok. If it turns out as a disaster... maybe notPlease post pics of the build
Will do, as long as it turns out ok. If it turns out as a disaster... maybe notPlease post pics of the build
Once I trim the the small vertical part, the distance from the plate to the tip is 42.5". Its going to loose about 3.5" when I add a new vertical from forks to top of plate, for approx 39" of usable length.Those look quite short, how far are they gonna stick into a pallet?
Assuming you have a bucket level indicator, how close to accurate is that with your fork set up?
Im cutting them off. I have a love-hate relationship with cordless grinder. Super handy, but dang it every time you get to really working, battery is dead againAre looking to preserve the clamp on protuberance? If not you could cut that off and recover some fork length.
Probably shutting the barn door after the cows are out but ...
I would have kept the forks perpendicular to the frame
I would have cut a hole in the frame, slid the forks through about 2 12" and welded a vertical upright to the fork and mount (if it didn't interfere with the SSQA locking mechanism)
I would think that I am "in your area". I mowed some property up the street and they also wanted me to clean up some of the junk laying around. One of the things that I hauled off was a set of forks that fit a skid steer. NO CHARGE! Since I already had a set rated at 4k that came with my Kubota, I offered them to a couple of my friends "on loan" in case I ever broke my original set. No takers, so now I am looking for an adapter to change the JD2555 over to SSQA so that I can use a set of forks on two tractors at the same time. Seems moving sheds around here has become a common thing to do, and pays pretty well to me.See, I would think that, but in my area, its rare to see them under $750-1000, used and very used. When import ones are $650-800...
Facebook If you pick up a set of these, you can make them adjustable width.See, I would think that, but in my area, its rare to see them under $750-1000, used and very used. When import ones are $650-800...
I build my own attachments because I can build better quality, stronger, with the features I want, sometimes lighter and usually (but not always) cheaper. Obviously that does require a certain skillset and tools though.You can always build or buy cheaper. I bought my land pride forks many years ago and never regretted it. Quality matters
It also means that you'll have significantly reduced capacity, since you're moving the load farther away from the machine.Well, that means the forks must be horizontal, while the plate is leaning forward. Would have been Far easier to mount forks at 90 degrees from plate, but that doesnt leave much curl left at the ground.
Rollback angle in the frame:Every set of forks I have the back frame is 90 degrees to the bottom. There’s no real need for a bunch of rollback angle at ground level. I would also adjust it so the back frame doesn’t protrude under the bottom of the forks.
Good time to cut those off and re-do them at a 90. With a bucket, you use that extra curl back to keep loose material from falling out of the bucket when it's down low. That's not an issue with forks. You don't need to curl them back that far.So, did some quick playing around this morning, and found a flaw. The welds hold fine, but the 1/4" ssqa plate is too easy to bend. So, im going to have to add reinforcement, not for the welds, but to spread the load to a larger surface area of the plate.
Don't feel bad.So, did some quick playing around this morning, and found a flaw. The welds hold fine, but the 1/4" ssqa plate is too easy to bend. So, im going to have to add reinforcement, not for the welds, but to spread the load to a larger surface area of the plate.