Farmwithjunk
Super Member
Agreed, since you cant even see that nobody has said that.
So your reading comprehension skills are somewhat lacking.....
Agreed, since you cant even see that nobody has said that.
The first time I walked down the dock at Ballast Point in '65, there was a crap-load of diesel boats tied up to the two tenders. I hadn't been to Sub School. One day they called everyone in Shop 67 in and asked if anyone wanted to go on the boats? Two of us were ignorant enough to raise our hands. A week later I was headed to Westpac and an education on Murphy's Laws. But at least I wasn't a skimmer anymore.
Interesting debate folks, I dont have an opinion just a question.
I pull/push depending on the tide skiffs regularly up and down the beach. When I have to pull I do it from the front with the tractor in reverse as the downward pull from the tractor to the boat tends to pull the bow down and the tractor digs in. With the boat attached to the bucket or forks I just back up til I lose traction and then use the bucket curl to gain a few feet hit reverse and uncurl the bucket and so on up the beach.
In the previous posts whenever pulling by the front was mentioned it was said that it would damage the tractor. So am I damaging my tractor even with the bucket curl doing most of the work?
Rick
I liked your joke Brandi!
No. Use of loader hydraulics is very low impact and you are doing it stationary to boot. Thread talk about pulling from the front is talking about a tractor frame connection, which could be a problem if the pull involved some jerking going backward. Loader pulls load the front axle a lot, but your scenario sounds benign ... lo angle, smooth, mostly stationary, etc:thumbsup:Interesting debate folks, I dont have an opinion just a question.
I pull/push depending on the tide skiffs regularly up and down the beach. When I have to pull I do it from the front with the tractor in reverse as the downward pull from the tractor to the boat tends to pull the bow down and the tractor digs in. With the boat attached to the bucket or forks I just back up til I lose traction and then use the bucket curl to gain a few feet hit reverse and uncurl the bucket and so on up the beach.
In the previous posts whenever pulling by the front was mentioned it was said that it would damage the tractor. So am I damaging my tractor even with the bucket curl doing most of the work?
Rick
Interesting debate folks, I dont have an opinion just a question.
I pull/push depending on the tide skiffs regularly up and down the beach. When I have to pull I do it from the front with the tractor in reverse as the downward pull from the tractor to the boat tends to pull the bow down and the tractor digs in. With the boat attached to the bucket or forks I just back up til I lose traction and then use the bucket curl to gain a few feet hit reverse and uncurl the bucket and so on up the beach.
In the previous posts whenever pulling by the front was mentioned it was said that it would damage the tractor. So am I damaging my tractor even with the bucket curl doing most of the work?
Rick
...the sub guy knew he was a bubblehead.
So am I damaging my tractor...?
We chased that bubble like our lives depended on it. Wanna try it?![]()
Short Game,
I think you missed the point of the joke.
The way I heard it, the skipper knew his surface was being filmed, so he thought he'd give 'em a show. Nearly lost the boat going back down past test depth, stern first. Did lose his commission, so the story goes.
Navy caption says it was an emergency surface test.
PICKEREL supposedly went stern-first below test depth after that stunt.
It sounds like control of the vessel was lost as a result. ... Looking at the video the sub appeared under perfect control at moderate speed for at least 10 seconds after the pop when filming ended. Did things go crazy after that? :confused2: Can you explain the mechanism?However, these guys did lose the bubble:
![]()
USS Pickerel (SS-524) surfacing at a 48 degree up angle, from a depth of 150 feet, during tests off the coast of Oahu, Hawaii, 1 March 1952.
The way I heard it, the skipper knew his surface was being filmed, so he thought he'd give 'em a show. Nearly lost the boat going back down past test depth, stern first. Did lose his commission, so the story goes.
It sounds like control of the vessel was lost as a result. ... Looking at the video the sub appeared under perfect control at moderate speed for at least 10 seconds after the pop when filming ended. Did things go crazy after that? :confused2: Can you explain the mechanism?
larry
Interesting set of variables. Lots of things could happen. Did you look at the film clip posted in #333? Sure looked like it had stabilized on the surface.![]()
Firstly, we have a 1570-ton Tench class submarine that is sticking a good portion of said tonnage from the heavy medium of seawater into the lighter medium of air. At the peak of the upward lunge, the boat is blowing ballasts and maximum powering up from 150 feet, exceeding the surface by maybe 60 feet, and maybe as much as 300 tons less seawater is being displaced. No longer displacing all that seawater, at that moment, that boat would be as much as that, negatively buoyant. The boat is about 300 feet long, its test depth is something like 407 feet. When the boat starts back down backwards, pushed by all that weight, how deep will the After Torpedo Room be?
All,
I just joined TBN and part of the registration is posting for the first time. This string looked particularly interesting, anyway - what is the moral of the story? What should I know to not kill myself trying to move an object too heavy for my JD 1050? In a previous life, I had bad experiences drawing vectors for a demanding (and obnoxious) instructor - when someone recommends getting out the paper & pencil, I generally look for the door. Is it correct to say that pulling from the front while in reverse is safest?
Jim