mjncad
Super Member
Yep...that video shows exactly what I expect would happen loading a mower in nose first.
8NTX said:Well I did it today. Bought some arched aluminum ramps. Unloading I just put in in neutral and stood behind it and let it down one rung at a time. Wasn't too difficult. Putting it in I tried to drive it up in reverse first. When the back tires got about halfway up, they just sat there and spun. No good. On level ground, I felt uneasy driving it up. So I moved the mower on top of one my little mound and backed the pickup up, attached the ramps and drove it in no problem. But loading it at the city house might pose a problem since there are no mounds, no hills, etc.. Probably enlist the neighbor's help.
When I bought my 1966 Bolens 41 years ago I had a sawmill cut me 2 Oak Planks 12'' wide 2'' thick and 8 foot long for ramps to load it on a full size pick up.sawdust_maker said:Why not build a pair of wooden ramps for the city house that will effectively reduce that slope by effectively lengthening the ramps? Make the wooden ramps so that the aluminum ramps hook onto the ends. Build these wooden extensions so they will not tip over of course.
John
8NTX said:But loading it at the city house might pose a problem since there are no mounds, no hills, etc.. Probably enlist the neighbor's help.
sawdust_maker said:Why not build a pair of wooden ramps for the city house that will effectively reduce that slope by effectively lengthening the ramps? Make the wooden ramps so that the aluminum ramps hook onto the ends. Build these wooden extensions so they will not tip over of course.
John
Iplayfarmer said:I must have been typing while you posted. I like the wooden ramps idea.
Something like this?...
(snipped)
Cheap, easy, and it beats backing against the curb any day.