MikeOConnor
Silver Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2002
- Messages
- 172
- Location
- Western Wisconsin
- Tractor
- Two Power-Trac 1850s (preferred for mowing and grapple-bucket clearing type work on really steep hills). Kubota M680 for snowblowing, grading, bucket.
Hi Power-Trac People. I've been over in the General Owning/Operating forum asking about this, but I'm homing in on the PT 1850 and want to ask you PT experts the same thing. Here's a link to the thread.
And here's the short version. Marcie and I have some really steep (like 30-45 degrees, up to 100% grade) hills on our farm that we want to do some major thinning on. Here's a link to a typical example. If you scroll about half way down that page, you'll see some pictures that give you a pretty good idea of how steep the hills are.
My thought is to go after these with a PT 1850 with; a tree shear for the little trees (maybe the new 10 ton version that's almost out), me running a chain saw to fell the bigger trees, the grapple bucket to forward the trees and slash off the hillsides, and the brush mower to clear off the little stuff.
I'm wondering if anybody in this forum of PT owners has ever tackled a project like this with PT equipment, and if so what your experiences have been.
Here are my worries;
- I know the PT 1850 is designed to *mow* on steep slopes, but perhaps I'm asking it to do too much when I ask it to also do bucket work?
- These hills are mine aren't smooth and I worry that the ground clearance on the PT 1850 is going to cause it to get hung up. Bob Skurka said some pretty reassuring stuff about articulated tractors and how they can get around in the first thread, so I'm feeling more confident -- but I'm interested in your thoughts as well.
- A big concern is the trade-off between going softly on the ground (very important for us, so we don't stir up weeds) but also traction. Any thoughts about this would be much appreciated.
I'm getting pretty keen on the machine, but there don't seem to be many of them out here in western Wisconsin, so I'm looking to find a few folks with real-world experience that I can quiz a little bit.
Thanks in advance...
And here's the short version. Marcie and I have some really steep (like 30-45 degrees, up to 100% grade) hills on our farm that we want to do some major thinning on. Here's a link to a typical example. If you scroll about half way down that page, you'll see some pictures that give you a pretty good idea of how steep the hills are.
My thought is to go after these with a PT 1850 with; a tree shear for the little trees (maybe the new 10 ton version that's almost out), me running a chain saw to fell the bigger trees, the grapple bucket to forward the trees and slash off the hillsides, and the brush mower to clear off the little stuff.
I'm wondering if anybody in this forum of PT owners has ever tackled a project like this with PT equipment, and if so what your experiences have been.
Here are my worries;
- I know the PT 1850 is designed to *mow* on steep slopes, but perhaps I'm asking it to do too much when I ask it to also do bucket work?
- These hills are mine aren't smooth and I worry that the ground clearance on the PT 1850 is going to cause it to get hung up. Bob Skurka said some pretty reassuring stuff about articulated tractors and how they can get around in the first thread, so I'm feeling more confident -- but I'm interested in your thoughts as well.
- A big concern is the trade-off between going softly on the ground (very important for us, so we don't stir up weeds) but also traction. Any thoughts about this would be much appreciated.
I'm getting pretty keen on the machine, but there don't seem to be many of them out here in western Wisconsin, so I'm looking to find a few folks with real-world experience that I can quiz a little bit.
Thanks in advance...