Rolando
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2004
- Messages
- 586
- Location
- Northcentral Florida
- Tractor
- Bobcat Toolcat High Flow Turbo C-series
I was digging out some palmetto bush roots from some very fine dry sand this weekend and managed to dig my right front tire into the sand all the way to the floor board and the left rear tire up in the air. I fiddled around for a few minutes trying to get free without much success and was thinking I would need get someone over to get me out when I realized that I had the FEL that I could use.
You have to keep in mind that I'm a total novice, but I first tried to push my way backing out with the curl of the of the FEL, which didn't work at all. The solution finally came to me. I dumped the bucket so I could get more height, then lowered the boom to raise up the front end of the Toolcat. I then got out and filled in the hole the tire had made, and viola!, lowered the front end onto level ground and I was then able to back out of the place.
I noticed something that seemed odd to me, but then again I don't know that much about these things. I noticed when I was stuck that the only tires that were turning were the right front that was in the hole and the rear left that was up in the air. The other two that were firmly on the ground weren't turning at all. Is that the way it's supposed to be with four-wheel drive? I couldn't lock the rear differential because the tires were turned and I couldn't straighten them to be able to switch to 2-wheel steer.
You have to keep in mind that I'm a total novice, but I first tried to push my way backing out with the curl of the of the FEL, which didn't work at all. The solution finally came to me. I dumped the bucket so I could get more height, then lowered the boom to raise up the front end of the Toolcat. I then got out and filled in the hole the tire had made, and viola!, lowered the front end onto level ground and I was then able to back out of the place.
I noticed something that seemed odd to me, but then again I don't know that much about these things. I noticed when I was stuck that the only tires that were turning were the right front that was in the hole and the rear left that was up in the air. The other two that were firmly on the ground weren't turning at all. Is that the way it's supposed to be with four-wheel drive? I couldn't lock the rear differential because the tires were turned and I couldn't straighten them to be able to switch to 2-wheel steer.