BarryinMN
Platinum Member
I'll jump in little.
Pix of my grapple attached. The tractor is a little heavier 55 pto @ 10K lbs with a 5500 lb loader breakout and a 6800 lb 3pt lift capacity. The grapple is attached to a commercial grade rock bucket with quick tach. Hydraulics are run from the rear remote lever (cheap install.)
Take a close look at the bucket and grapple materials you might buy as some are made of soft steel and get bent & mangled easily. Harder steels transfer the force into the loader arms. Lifting force is one thing but remember that the load can wedge against something & lever significant forces into your machinery.
Anyway, I do the same as others have said thru your thread: Dig with a backhoe grab with grapple. I've also simply grabbed a blow down 30'+ whole tree by the root ball & drive down the trail to the sawing/chipping area. Saved 1/2 hour sawing/chaining/dragging, etc.
You'll get a feel for your machine limits on your terrain with practice.
I also have a JD dozer that I simply wait till Winter & shatter the tree trunk at the base leaving the root ball frozen in the ground to make trails.
With my slopes approaching 100% in places a tracked machine is a lot more stable when dragging a or pushing.
Putting a backhoe on a slope can be disturbing. Practice a bunch on small stuff & flatter ground before going upslope /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
A final thought with your budget maybe buying used Industrial TLB like a Case 580 to take the abuse and then sell it.
Buy a new tractor after the hard stuff is done. It'll stay new looking longer /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
Pix of my grapple attached. The tractor is a little heavier 55 pto @ 10K lbs with a 5500 lb loader breakout and a 6800 lb 3pt lift capacity. The grapple is attached to a commercial grade rock bucket with quick tach. Hydraulics are run from the rear remote lever (cheap install.)
Take a close look at the bucket and grapple materials you might buy as some are made of soft steel and get bent & mangled easily. Harder steels transfer the force into the loader arms. Lifting force is one thing but remember that the load can wedge against something & lever significant forces into your machinery.
Anyway, I do the same as others have said thru your thread: Dig with a backhoe grab with grapple. I've also simply grabbed a blow down 30'+ whole tree by the root ball & drive down the trail to the sawing/chipping area. Saved 1/2 hour sawing/chaining/dragging, etc.
You'll get a feel for your machine limits on your terrain with practice.
I also have a JD dozer that I simply wait till Winter & shatter the tree trunk at the base leaving the root ball frozen in the ground to make trails.
With my slopes approaching 100% in places a tracked machine is a lot more stable when dragging a or pushing.
Putting a backhoe on a slope can be disturbing. Practice a bunch on small stuff & flatter ground before going upslope /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
A final thought with your budget maybe buying used Industrial TLB like a Case 580 to take the abuse and then sell it.
Buy a new tractor after the hard stuff is done. It'll stay new looking longer /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif