Short Game
Veteran Member
I got the steel on Wednesday to build my six feet on center log forks for my R4010 LS. I will be taking pictures when I remember to. And when I get to where I can post them, I will (maybe, depending on how awful my welds look :laughing
. I'm doing this to get the logs as close in to the loader as possible, as the reach of the bucket, plus the quick-release stuff, was giving the logs too much leverage over the machine. I'm making it six feet wide to support the logs a little better than the bucket forks did at five feet. The steel ran about $235 (pretty amazing when you consider that there are no moving parts). The first components are clamped to a bench and ready for tacking.
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I use the forks as a saw buck, as my blown up fifth lumbar makes bending over with a chainsaw self limiting (meaning, if I do it today, I won't be able to tomorrow). I like to buck at chest height and let the saw just climb up into the cut and hold itself up. I've bucked a thousand logs that way. I cut most of the way through, having learned how far not to cut (it's not good when the log comes apart on the forks, trust me on that). The I roll the partially bucked logs onto the ground or deck before I buck the next log. I walk along and finish the cuts, which usually end up on top and are easy enough to reach. As I finish more logs, they wind up decked up and looking like whole logs, though they are already bucked. Then I circle the deck with my box scraper mounted splitter and wood cart towing behind. The rounds nearly split right into the cart.
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I use the forks as a saw buck, as my blown up fifth lumbar makes bending over with a chainsaw self limiting (meaning, if I do it today, I won't be able to tomorrow). I like to buck at chest height and let the saw just climb up into the cut and hold itself up. I've bucked a thousand logs that way. I cut most of the way through, having learned how far not to cut (it's not good when the log comes apart on the forks, trust me on that). The I roll the partially bucked logs onto the ground or deck before I buck the next log. I walk along and finish the cuts, which usually end up on top and are easy enough to reach. As I finish more logs, they wind up decked up and looking like whole logs, though they are already bucked. Then I circle the deck with my box scraper mounted splitter and wood cart towing behind. The rounds nearly split right into the cart.
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