Baby Grand
Elite Member
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2007
- Messages
- 4,649
- Location
- Windsor, CT.
- Tractor
- Kubotas: L3240GST B2320HST B5100D & G5200H
Back to the OP's original question - pulling stumps using the 3pt hitch:
I've had some luck plucking small ones (< 6" diameter hardwoods with no taproots) using a single point sub-soiler. This is on a 3,500# 32 HP machine with an additional 1160# FEL attached. Puts the 3pt hydraulics into bypass without lifting the fronts at all. It's not quick and sometimes I have to "fly the box", cutting the side roots, as some others have described. If you can get the point of the subsoiler hooked under the stump you will have tremendous power pulling straight up with the 3pt hitch, as the contact between the subsoiler point and the stump will be right around the fwd/aft location of the 3pt lift pins, but down, under the stump. To do this effectively, it helps to cut the stump as close to flush with the ground as you can without fouling you saw blade in the dirt. Otherwise that stump and one of your rear tires will always be trying to occupy the same place at the same time as you try weakening the side roots - gets tippy real quick!
I've had some luck plucking small ones (< 6" diameter hardwoods with no taproots) using a single point sub-soiler. This is on a 3,500# 32 HP machine with an additional 1160# FEL attached. Puts the 3pt hydraulics into bypass without lifting the fronts at all. It's not quick and sometimes I have to "fly the box", cutting the side roots, as some others have described. If you can get the point of the subsoiler hooked under the stump you will have tremendous power pulling straight up with the 3pt hitch, as the contact between the subsoiler point and the stump will be right around the fwd/aft location of the 3pt lift pins, but down, under the stump. To do this effectively, it helps to cut the stump as close to flush with the ground as you can without fouling you saw blade in the dirt. Otherwise that stump and one of your rear tires will always be trying to occupy the same place at the same time as you try weakening the side roots - gets tippy real quick!
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