Mulching straight lines

   / Mulching straight lines #1  

ALittleDirtWontHurt

Bronze Member
Joined
Sep 30, 2012
Messages
79
Location
VIRGINIA
Tractor
Gyrotrac GT-25, Terex PT110 Forestry, New Holland TC33, Kubota KX080, Terex PT30, Rayco C140, Polaris ATP 500
I'm looking for some ideas for an upcoming job mulching straight lines for a forestry project. Topography is not an issue as it is very flat, but line of sight is, due to navigating around larger trees and other obstacles that won't be mulched. Working in fairly dense forest. Can't seem to get a good GPS signal from inside the cab and a good ol' fashioned compass will just take too long (many miles to cut and having a surveyor come in and mark beforehand is just not an option). Anybody run into this before and found a cost effective and reliable method?
 
   / Mulching straight lines #2  
I will be following this for any good ideas.
My experience has been that I also get no reliable GPS inside my PT-110 as well when mulching. Compass is useless as well due to the mass of metal.

I have run a compass line combined with GPS and used flagging tape for an approximate line.
It is not exact and has errors but as long as you can accept +/- 10 feet it works but does take time for advance work.

My next concept is to set up a transit and use a radio to stay on/near the line. Leapfroging the transit as you go forward. It takes another person or a lot of get out and go back and verify that wondering has not occurred. I suppose you could get more cosmic but the cost would get cosmic as well. Currently I am getting close then running a transit//TS to verify the actual line.

I struggle with the issue. Hopefully someone will come along with a better solution.

Trovenn Forestry Mulching
 
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   / Mulching straight lines #4  
Can you take a handheld gps and tape it as you go before getting in the machine?

Brett
 
   / Mulching straight lines #5  
There are GPS with external antenna.
For more accuracy some use 2 antenna.
 
   / Mulching straight lines #6  
When I was working on a large subdivision project a few years back, the project manager had a high end handheld GPS unit that would see through the canopy when my Garmin would not. I'll bet that such a unit, combined with external antenna(s) will be the easiest, most reliable solution. If I remember correctly, his unit also had much more accuracy than anything my Garmins had ever had.

I do not know the name brand of the unit. All I remember is that it was dark blue, handheld and about twice plus the size of my Garmin unit.
 
   / Mulching straight lines #7  
Trimble , Topcon or Leca would be the best GPS to use. You client can make a disc/ UBS stick with everything they want cleared , plug it in and Bobs yer uncle. The ones I have seen in the past don't have any screen , just some red lights and one green. I'm pretty sure you can rent them.
 
   / Mulching straight lines #9  
we do this all the time. Literally thousands upon thousands of miles of it. Just use a GPS with an external antenna. You need to mount the antenna in such a way as to protect the cable and antenna from damage. Always have a spare antenna. Watch the satellites (accuracy).

There is a learning curve for an operator...
 
   / Mulching straight lines #10  
Can you take a handheld gps and tape it as you go before getting in the machine?

Brett

This would be the safest bet. We call it "flagging". If trespass is a concern this would be best if you have never mulched by GPS before.
 

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