wroughtn_harv
Super Member
I need you to post a picture or two of your Belltec auger you've been using.
I've got about two hundred and fifty holes to dig in limestone. I dug about thirty five or so the other day and found out a couple of things. The most important was this monster of a bit that I'd assumed would kick butt is all show and no go.
It's a pengo brand with carbide teeth in a staircase pattern. It didn't dig an better if not as good as my pengo auger with carbide teeth instead of the clay teeth.
So I went to Jiffy products in Dallas and had a sit down with Rob. I've heard Belltec wants in the neighborhood of two grand for their twelve inch DP auger. Diggerworld wants twelve hundred allegedly for the same thing.
After some serious phone calling and rock kicking with Rob I ordered two twelve inch DP heads. One with an ANSI pipe flange and the other blank. The ANSI one is for a company that I sub from occassionally that's losing money every hole on a job in rock.
The blank one is for me. I got the blank with all the teeth (seventeen of them carbide puppies) for less than six and I get to make my own auger too. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
If I recall correctly you had your set up where you could leave the tractor and just let it do it's thing. I can do the same thing with Iris when I have it on high flow.
Here's my plan. I'm going to use your concept of the boom with weights. I have a couple of considerations though. One is Iris can only pick up about seventeen fifty before she goes for a nose dive. To get the maximum affect out of the weight on the boom I need to move it out like you did. But out there Iris won't be able to lift it up much less pull the auger out of the hole.
So I'm thinking a couple of thoughts and I'd like your input please.
One, have the boom out about six feet with a shiv and cable to allow the weight to rest on the ground while the auger is pulled up. Then have a second cable to pull the weight close to the tractor to minimize the weight as much as possible.
The weight is my anvil stand, a chunk of steel that weighs a paltry nine hundred seventeen pounds or real close thereabouts.
Two, place the weight on a three wheel cart for moving from hole to hole. When the weight is required I place the weight below the boom and then using a cable jack or come along I apply down pressure as required by lifting the weight.
Three, I borrow a bud's little Case skid steer and use it or my truck for the weight when I'm in a situation where I can get the truck into position. Before this little storm blew in using the truck would have been first choice. But now, well, I'd have to have a crawler to move Lucy from hole to hole. /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
What I've got in mind for the boom is a three arm pipe affair with a quick connect system like they use on some of the attachments. I curl it on and off and let gravity be the lock in place while in use.
BTW I dug the holes Thursday relatively quick and easy. Almost all of them are down three feet and the most shallow one is still over two feet deep. We're talking thirty some holes in an afternoon.
But I believe with the new system I should be able to cut that by at least a third. I've also got some gate posts I want to have down at least five feet into the rock. And this terrain here runs from crumbly to almost granite. When I hit the hard stuff I'd like to have a fighting chance.
I've got about two hundred and fifty holes to dig in limestone. I dug about thirty five or so the other day and found out a couple of things. The most important was this monster of a bit that I'd assumed would kick butt is all show and no go.
It's a pengo brand with carbide teeth in a staircase pattern. It didn't dig an better if not as good as my pengo auger with carbide teeth instead of the clay teeth.
So I went to Jiffy products in Dallas and had a sit down with Rob. I've heard Belltec wants in the neighborhood of two grand for their twelve inch DP auger. Diggerworld wants twelve hundred allegedly for the same thing.
After some serious phone calling and rock kicking with Rob I ordered two twelve inch DP heads. One with an ANSI pipe flange and the other blank. The ANSI one is for a company that I sub from occassionally that's losing money every hole on a job in rock.
The blank one is for me. I got the blank with all the teeth (seventeen of them carbide puppies) for less than six and I get to make my own auger too. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
If I recall correctly you had your set up where you could leave the tractor and just let it do it's thing. I can do the same thing with Iris when I have it on high flow.
Here's my plan. I'm going to use your concept of the boom with weights. I have a couple of considerations though. One is Iris can only pick up about seventeen fifty before she goes for a nose dive. To get the maximum affect out of the weight on the boom I need to move it out like you did. But out there Iris won't be able to lift it up much less pull the auger out of the hole.
So I'm thinking a couple of thoughts and I'd like your input please.
One, have the boom out about six feet with a shiv and cable to allow the weight to rest on the ground while the auger is pulled up. Then have a second cable to pull the weight close to the tractor to minimize the weight as much as possible.
The weight is my anvil stand, a chunk of steel that weighs a paltry nine hundred seventeen pounds or real close thereabouts.
Two, place the weight on a three wheel cart for moving from hole to hole. When the weight is required I place the weight below the boom and then using a cable jack or come along I apply down pressure as required by lifting the weight.
Three, I borrow a bud's little Case skid steer and use it or my truck for the weight when I'm in a situation where I can get the truck into position. Before this little storm blew in using the truck would have been first choice. But now, well, I'd have to have a crawler to move Lucy from hole to hole. /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
What I've got in mind for the boom is a three arm pipe affair with a quick connect system like they use on some of the attachments. I curl it on and off and let gravity be the lock in place while in use.
BTW I dug the holes Thursday relatively quick and easy. Almost all of them are down three feet and the most shallow one is still over two feet deep. We're talking thirty some holes in an afternoon.
But I believe with the new system I should be able to cut that by at least a third. I've also got some gate posts I want to have down at least five feet into the rock. And this terrain here runs from crumbly to almost granite. When I hit the hard stuff I'd like to have a fighting chance.