Post puller….

   / Post puller…. #21  
I have one on my Kioti Ck3510. Works fine on small stuff- in my case of heavy clay soil 3” about the max. Grab on and rock back and forth then pull
Mart,
Which brand do you have on your CK? Tital? MTL? other? Assuming it mated right to your existing SSQA on the ck?
Thx.
 
   / Post puller…. #22  
On a CK4010 I have the stinger stp-34. A neighbor saw what I was doing, then got a used titan puller for his skid steer.

"Ok now I know why u kept taking trees out! Cleaned up at home at night and now working down the road on my dad's and uncle's field. Just watch out for bigger mulberry trees and don't grab an oak...."
They both work with the ssqa. The stinger can grab a bigger mouthfull of small stuff. His was less expensive, works nearly as well.
 

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   / Post puller…. #23  
Mart,
Which brand do you have on your CK? Tital? MTL? other? Assuming it mated right to your existing SSQA on the ck?
Thx.
Titan and yes quick attach SSQA
 
   / Post puller…. #24  
I spent maybe half an hour trying to pull an oak a bit under 3" with my 25 hp 2500 base weight tractor, using cable grips on an adapter on the FEL. I'm wrapping a few turns of 5/16" cable around the trunk at least two feet above ground level, having already cut the tree above this level. I was shifting it plenty but didn't get it out. I was getting one or the other rear to come off the ground slightly, which could get scary except I'm operating in the lowest gear and I don't think I'm lifting them an inch before I can clutch and let them down. My rears are filled and I could add an 800 lb ballast box, but this also sounds like it could get hard on the equipment. Oaks are more difficult that way, I think, and our ground is this awful bank gravel cemented together with clay. I pulled the cable out of the clamps several times and am breaking strands, though I have a good amount of cable available. But I had to stop, not enough time. Will get another chance Monday morning, and I might start pouring some water into the gap around the tree to lubricate the whole operation.

Maybe I can shower myself with mud in the process. If anything amusing results, I promise to post.
 
   / Post puller…. #25  
Seems like it would be safer and give better results to use the tractor drawbar to pull it with a chain wrapped around a wheel? And/or wait until the ground has been saturated with moisture over this winter so you aren't dealing with concrete hard ground.
 
   / Post puller…. #26  
Oak has a very long tap root. The tensile strength to snap that root is 10,000psi. Hickory also has a strong tap root. I have not managed to get one out yet by just pulling on it.
 
   / Post puller…. #27  
So I got a little work done at the property…
And I decided that the many small trees might be best handled by the titan post puller..



Anyone else have one?

Nope, I just put on the forks, put the tree trunk between the forks, wrap a log chain around the forks and a few wraps around the tree trunk, and lift up. I do the same thing for fence posts. Fence posts are a lot easier than trees to pull out.

The thing I see this tool doing for you is that it obviates the need to wrap a log chain around the trunk, you just drive up and wedge/pinch the trunk in the crotch of the tool. If you have a bunch of trees to get, it would save some time. Whether or not it's worth the price of admission is up to you. I can tell you I took out a fence line by pulling up the posts with a log chain and forks and it only took about 30-40 seconds per post to wrap and unwrap the chain.
 
   / Post puller…. #28  
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I bought a new MTL attachments puller back about 2 years ago. You have to be easy as it will just cut small saplings in half.
 
   / Post puller…. #29  
Seems like it would be safer and give better results to use the tractor drawbar to pull it with a chain wrapped around a wheel?
Not sure I follow. What wheel? Are you rolling just a wheel, by itself, over to the stump, putting the chain on top of it, running the chain approximately horizontally to the drawbar, and using that wheel kind of like a gin pole? Or are you wrapping the chain around a wheel on the tractor to create a winch?

Some of the things this could have meant seem like a way to flip the tractor over backwards on top of a tree stump. Yikes.
 
   / Post puller…. #30  
There's a whole thread that discusses this method. Here's a link to one post with YT videos demonstrating it.

The short version is the drawbar is the lowest center of gravity that you can pull from. Instead of pulling a tree from a sideways direction where the tree is most resistant to being uprooted, putting the chain over a tire allows you to pull upwards on the tree.

One can't afford to be stupid about this, however. If the tree is too big, you could flip the tractor or break something. Dead limbs can fall on the operator's station. If you are successful at pulling the tree, the tree will also fall towards the operator's station. You have to use careful judgment about how big a tree you deem safe to pull.

Pulling tree out with wheel & chain?
 
   / Post puller…. #31  
View attachment 775135I bought a new MTL attachments puller back about 2 years ago. You have to be easy as it will just cut small saplings in half.

I had the same problem. I have purchased a wireless camera and plan to use it so I can tell when I have enough "pinch" without pinching through the smaller trees.

I have used chain to pull trees but a puller like this means not having to get off and on the tractor. When I was using chains, my fiancé would drive the tractor and I would handle the chains.

Another benefit of the puller is I get much less exposure to ticks when pulling trees with it. Staying in a heated/cooled cab makes a long day shorter.

I paid $1000 for my puller and while that is not cheap, I look at it as a 20 year investment. If I ever decide to get rid of it, I doubt I will lose much on it and I have a tool that makes things easier for me.
 
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   / Post puller…. #32  
I have used chain to pull trees but a puller like this means not having to get off and on the tractor. When I was using chains, my fiancé would drive the tractor and I would handle the chains.

That's what I was doing. I had one of those Brush Brubber units that work well on small stuff and as you said not having to wade into the tick farm to attach the grubber. The on and off tractor was getting real old.
 
   / Post puller…. #33  
I got that little oak out this morning. I'd cut it off a few feet up and was working it back and forth with my cable hanging from a FEL adapter plate. I poured a bucket of warm water, with a little soap in it, into the hole while working it around, reasoning that this would break up the adhesion of the clay and gravel soil anchoring it in place (the reason that trees are more likely to blow over after a soaking rain).
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   / Post puller…. #34  
I've used my grapple - Land Pride SGC1560 - to pull brush. It comes out in clumps. Give it a good shake and pile it up. Move the brush pile to the burn pit when done. My pine stands are too thick to get in with the Kubota. I thin the stands by chainsaw felling and then chip.

820 pound grapple on my 10,050 pound Kubota M6040.
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   / Post puller…. #35  
I've used my grapple - Land Pride SGC1560 - to pull brush. It comes out in clumps. Give it a good shake and pile it up. Move the brush pile to the burn pit when done. My pine stands are too thick to get in with the Kubota. I thin the stands by chainsaw felling and then chip.

820 pound grapple on my 10,050 pound Kubota M6040.
View attachment 775542
Could you define brush. What kinds of things do you have that need removing in WA.
 
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   / Post puller…. #36  
The brush here is called Buck brush. Grows to two feet high - thick as the hair on the back of a hound dog - as big in diameter as the base of your little finger.

I use the grapple to move large rocks and chunks of pine tree trunk. Also - clean up any pine trees that fall or I cut down.
 
   / Post puller…. #37  
I sometimes use one on my skidsteer that I bought when I had a m7060.
A few things I have learned to do to improve the uses of this attachment are:
1. Grab the tree up high and clamp down tight. Pull down and curl out to snap off the top of the tree. (20ft tree can be cut in half makes smaller burn piles).
2. For 3+ inch hardwoods first close the jaws and use the implement like a spade to pull the top soil off root system and cut part of the roots. (significantly reduces dirt pulled up with the tree and increases the size of tree that I can easily dislodge)
3. For smaller than 3in first spread the jaw and drag the open jaw across the ground and pinch closed once clear of the tree. (disturbs less soil and the pinch cuts roots on tractor side of tree making it easy to push the tree forward and lift to remove it)
4. For larger pines that you can't just lift out of the ground use the closed jaw as a spade to make a hole behind the tree and then push the tree over snapping the tap root at the depth of the hole.
5. For small sapplings < 2in grab the first one pull it up move to next one spread jaw drive forward grab it and pull. Rinse and repeat till too much in jaw to easily work with before backing up and dumping to the side.
6. Anything much larger than 5 to 6 inches then this is the wrong tool. I switch to my fixed hoe (Dipper stick on a skid steer plate). I can push over 12in trees no problem by grubbing the roots all the way around the tree and then pushing it. I doubt most tractor loader arms could handle the stresses of the hoe though.
7. A tree shear down in the dirt would probably be a better choice for most trees over 3inches. Come back through with a multi shank subsoiler to clear the roots.
8. Don't use it to pull posts you plan to reuse. Posts will be crushed no matter how careful you are. Maybe you could add a pressure relief valve set to really low to allow the use without crushing the posts. Maybe like 200-300 psi. 2500psi of a tractor will crush posts of all types pretty good. However it does makes quick work to crush concrete off the bottom of metal posts. Do it over a tarp to ease cleanup.
 
 

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