boggen
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2011
- Messages
- 3,789
- Location
- Trivoli, IL
- Tractor
- SSTT (Sideways Snake Tain Tractor) and STB (sideways train box) tractor, dirt harvester
with others for putting blade down, to raise tracks up. then tossing some logs down below the tracks.
if you go look at some youtube videos, for "excavators" and digging out a lake. you will most likely see folks taking a few timbers and bolting the timbers together into a large mat. errrr little bit wider than tracks and a couple feet long. and the excavators will pick the mats up place them in front of the tracks on excavators. use the bucket to lift front end of the machine up, and roll up on top of the mats. and repeat this all over again.
the mats. help spread out the weight so the machine does not sink as badly. problem doing this for a dozer. is the dozer blade may not push down far enough to raise the tracks high enough. and you may not be able to get the logs / mats to climb down to the very bottom of the tracks. you may just end up lifting the front end of the dozer higher and causing a higher ramp the dozer has to climb out of. that ends up slicker than snot. due to tracks not able to grab a hold of the logs. and weight of machine. more on rear than on front of machine. due to angle dozer may end up at.
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strapping a log to the tracks, would be kinda like putting spikes on a car or truck tire, for better traction on snow. but in this case. the log would take a bigger bite into the mud. in sense you would be going from turf tires to AG tires. when a log get strapped to the tracks. you may have problem getting chains undone once log gets all the way to the bottom of the tracks. and have to manual dig and huff and puff to remove chain.
strapping a log to a single track. so log gets dragged under the track and creates in idea a solid ramp for that track to walk up on. big problem could be once log gets dragged all the way down. is un-hooking chain clear down in the mud. so you can continue to try and get track to crawl up the log.
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when folks say strap a chain, to the tracks, and then let the chain get dragged down below the tracks. is same thing as using a single log under a track, to act like a ramp. but the chain will more likely be easier to un hook and/or remove. due to a chain can bend. right around the tracks. problem is needing something to anchor the chain to.
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tracked excavator. more likely able to get itself unstuck. and keep on going. excavator more likely to easier to position near dozer, and dig around the dozer. both to free the tracks out of the mud and if need be create a ramp. but it may also help, as far as help lifting the dozer some. taking the weight the dozer is placing on the mud. so it does not continue to sink as you try to get it out. problem is finding places to hook a chain on dozer so you can push/pull/lift with excavator. perhaps there is a place on bottom of excavator between the tracks, were you can hook a chain on. and then toss chain onto dozer. and use both the bucket of the excavator and use of excavator tracks, to get some extra force. to pull the dozer out.
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if you are going to try and "winch" the dozer out. pay attention of how the cable / chain is ran. you might have some better luck, placing a small A frame near the dozer. so when the winch starts pulling. the dozer gets lifted up and forward, vs getting dragged straight into more dirt. look at some of the "tree pulling" threads here on the forum. were folks have done just that, placed an A frame near a tree. tied a chain near bottom of tree. then placed chain up over A frame, then low on rear end of tractor. the A frame transfer the pulling force upward and to one direction.
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if you really think waiting till middle to end of dry season, would really help getting the machine out, then wait.
digging a trench to help remove water from the area. may or may not be good. it can take some good amount of time, as in weeks to months, after digging a trench to help drain water out of the surrounding soil.
if you go look at some youtube videos, for "excavators" and digging out a lake. you will most likely see folks taking a few timbers and bolting the timbers together into a large mat. errrr little bit wider than tracks and a couple feet long. and the excavators will pick the mats up place them in front of the tracks on excavators. use the bucket to lift front end of the machine up, and roll up on top of the mats. and repeat this all over again.
the mats. help spread out the weight so the machine does not sink as badly. problem doing this for a dozer. is the dozer blade may not push down far enough to raise the tracks high enough. and you may not be able to get the logs / mats to climb down to the very bottom of the tracks. you may just end up lifting the front end of the dozer higher and causing a higher ramp the dozer has to climb out of. that ends up slicker than snot. due to tracks not able to grab a hold of the logs. and weight of machine. more on rear than on front of machine. due to angle dozer may end up at.
===============
strapping a log to the tracks, would be kinda like putting spikes on a car or truck tire, for better traction on snow. but in this case. the log would take a bigger bite into the mud. in sense you would be going from turf tires to AG tires. when a log get strapped to the tracks. you may have problem getting chains undone once log gets all the way to the bottom of the tracks. and have to manual dig and huff and puff to remove chain.
strapping a log to a single track. so log gets dragged under the track and creates in idea a solid ramp for that track to walk up on. big problem could be once log gets dragged all the way down. is un-hooking chain clear down in the mud. so you can continue to try and get track to crawl up the log.
================
when folks say strap a chain, to the tracks, and then let the chain get dragged down below the tracks. is same thing as using a single log under a track, to act like a ramp. but the chain will more likely be easier to un hook and/or remove. due to a chain can bend. right around the tracks. problem is needing something to anchor the chain to.
===============
tracked excavator. more likely able to get itself unstuck. and keep on going. excavator more likely to easier to position near dozer, and dig around the dozer. both to free the tracks out of the mud and if need be create a ramp. but it may also help, as far as help lifting the dozer some. taking the weight the dozer is placing on the mud. so it does not continue to sink as you try to get it out. problem is finding places to hook a chain on dozer so you can push/pull/lift with excavator. perhaps there is a place on bottom of excavator between the tracks, were you can hook a chain on. and then toss chain onto dozer. and use both the bucket of the excavator and use of excavator tracks, to get some extra force. to pull the dozer out.
=================
if you are going to try and "winch" the dozer out. pay attention of how the cable / chain is ran. you might have some better luck, placing a small A frame near the dozer. so when the winch starts pulling. the dozer gets lifted up and forward, vs getting dragged straight into more dirt. look at some of the "tree pulling" threads here on the forum. were folks have done just that, placed an A frame near a tree. tied a chain near bottom of tree. then placed chain up over A frame, then low on rear end of tractor. the A frame transfer the pulling force upward and to one direction.
=================
if you really think waiting till middle to end of dry season, would really help getting the machine out, then wait.
digging a trench to help remove water from the area. may or may not be good. it can take some good amount of time, as in weeks to months, after digging a trench to help drain water out of the surrounding soil.