daTeacha
Veteran Member
I'm not sure this is the right forum for this one, but it seems close enough.
I have the QA fel on my Case DX29. I also have a 3 point carry-all that was bought thinking it would be very useful with my old Kubota, which turned out to be incorrect, leaving me with a nice carry-all and nothing to use it with.
The bucket on the Case is a little wide to easily move into and out of my woodshed, so I have made up some side plates from 3" angle iron and welded them to the sides of the carry-all, enabling me to lift it with the fel and easily move in and out of the woodshed with a pallet or box on the carry-all.
Now, I'm thinking a front snow blade is much nicer to use than a rear one, so I have a slight modification to the carryall which will allow me to mount my 6' rear blade to it. I'll be putting the force from the blade against 1/2 inch thick piece of steel 36 inches long and 8 inches tall backed by a piece of 3" x 1/4" thick angle iron set to form an inverted V shape against the length of the steel plate. The angle iron is part of the frame of the carry-all. Behind that, I'll be making a 3" box member out of more of the channel steel to back up the angle iron and also serve as the lock for the pin that keeps the blade in position.
The blade pivots on a 1 3/4" diameter piece of round steel which currently fits in a 3" diameter round section that is welded to some heavy angle. The force pulls against the angle iron of the original 3 point frame of the back blade. In the new application, it will push against the frame of the carry-all.
My question is this -- do you guys think a 3 inch wide block of steel in the center of the 36" wide 1/2" thick plate will be wide enough to not risk bending the frame of the carry-all when plowing snow? The block will be 4" tall and the plate will be 8" tall.
I need to have this piece made up by an outside shop, probably at the local career center where my wife is a counselor. I can't drill a 1 3/4" hole through a 4" thickness of steel with my tools. They could probably make the block as wide as I want it but I don't want it any bigger than needed because it will interfere with the wood carrying work. How wide do you think I need it to be?
I have the QA fel on my Case DX29. I also have a 3 point carry-all that was bought thinking it would be very useful with my old Kubota, which turned out to be incorrect, leaving me with a nice carry-all and nothing to use it with.
The bucket on the Case is a little wide to easily move into and out of my woodshed, so I have made up some side plates from 3" angle iron and welded them to the sides of the carry-all, enabling me to lift it with the fel and easily move in and out of the woodshed with a pallet or box on the carry-all.
Now, I'm thinking a front snow blade is much nicer to use than a rear one, so I have a slight modification to the carryall which will allow me to mount my 6' rear blade to it. I'll be putting the force from the blade against 1/2 inch thick piece of steel 36 inches long and 8 inches tall backed by a piece of 3" x 1/4" thick angle iron set to form an inverted V shape against the length of the steel plate. The angle iron is part of the frame of the carry-all. Behind that, I'll be making a 3" box member out of more of the channel steel to back up the angle iron and also serve as the lock for the pin that keeps the blade in position.
The blade pivots on a 1 3/4" diameter piece of round steel which currently fits in a 3" diameter round section that is welded to some heavy angle. The force pulls against the angle iron of the original 3 point frame of the back blade. In the new application, it will push against the frame of the carry-all.
My question is this -- do you guys think a 3 inch wide block of steel in the center of the 36" wide 1/2" thick plate will be wide enough to not risk bending the frame of the carry-all when plowing snow? The block will be 4" tall and the plate will be 8" tall.
I need to have this piece made up by an outside shop, probably at the local career center where my wife is a counselor. I can't drill a 1 3/4" hole through a 4" thickness of steel with my tools. They could probably make the block as wide as I want it but I don't want it any bigger than needed because it will interfere with the wood carrying work. How wide do you think I need it to be?