Tree Shear

   / Tree Shear #1  

TRUKFXR

Bronze Member
Joined
Nov 16, 2005
Messages
97
Location
Illinois
Tractor
Gehl AL20DX
I was just looking at old posts about the Power-trac tree shear and thinking that building one might be an interesting project. J J has a nice design and
completed unit. I like the idea of using the 2'' box receiver as a mount. As I give this some thought, any suggestions or things I should do, or not do when making my plans?
 
   / Tree Shear #2  
TRUKFXR said:
I was just looking at old posts about the Power-trac tree shear and thinking that building one might be an interesting project. J J has a nice design and
completed unit. I like the idea of using the 2'' box receiver as a mount. As I give this some thought, any suggestions or things I should do, or not do when making my plans?

The things I like about mine is, that you can shear with it straight out, straight up , straight down, like cutting roots., also sideways/horizontal. If you make it powerful and light , you should be able to reach up in trees and trim whatever.

Only one of my blades is sharp, Two sharp edges might be better.

To control the shear, I used the AUX hydraulic circuit. You could also use an electric valve, with a toggle switch on the joystick.
 
   / Tree Shear
  • Thread Starter
#3  
I like that you use only one cylinder too (unlike the power-trac design) . That should save me a little money. I intend on cutting new Willow tree growth that is not more that 2 1/2'' in diameter. Not sure how well it will cut,
but I can always give it a hard pull too.
 
   / Tree Shear
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Just a thought. Can anybody look at the Power-trac mini-hoe and envision a way of removing the bucket and creating a tree shear? It would have to be a quick change design that uses the basic format of the mini-hoe so it could be changed at will. Seems crazy, and I can't quite see it, but maybe its there
somewhere.
 
   / Tree Shear #5  
TRUKFXR said:
Just a thought. Can anybody look at the Power-trac mini-hoe and envision a way of removing the bucket and creating a tree shear? It would have to be a quick change design that uses the basic format of the mini-hoe so it could be changed at will. Seems crazy, and I can't quite see it, but maybe its there
somewhere.

I can't easily see it, because the minihoe cylinder operates front-to-back, while a tree shear would need the cylinder operating side-to-side, wo move the blade. If you could adapt one, I think it would be more readily made to operate vertically (cutting limbs) versus horizontal (cutting trees).
 
   / Tree Shear #6  
TRUKFXR said:
Just a thought. Can anybody look at the Power-trac mini-hoe and envision a way of removing the bucket and creating a tree shear? It would have to be a quick change design that uses the basic format of the mini-hoe so it could be changed at will. Seems crazy, and I can't quite see it, but maybe its there
somewhere.

I think this deserves some thought. The minihoe has a good reach and a cylinder. I think most of the use would be cutting branches, so the orientation might be good. I wonder if I could adapt my homemade thumb as the cutting edge and attach something to the bucket as the stop. That way the cutting edge would be on the bottom and the stop would be on top. Might be worth the effort just to jury rig something and see how well it works. I think the stop on the bucket should be near the pivot to get more force on the cut. You could also replace the bucket bolts with hitch pins for easy change out and put the stop on in place of the bucket. You could also bungee a stop to the bucket since all of the force would keep it on anyway. Does anyone else have some thoughts on this?
 
   / Tree Shear #7  
BobRip said:
I think this deserves some thought. The minihoe has a good reach and a cylinder. I think most of the use would be cutting branches, so the orientation might be good. I wonder if I could adapt my homemade thumb as the cutting edge and attach something to the bucket as the stop. That way the cutting edge would be on the bottom and the stop would be on top. Might be worth the effort just to jury rig something and see how well it works. I think the stop on the bucket should be near the pivot to get more force on the cut. You could also replace the bucket bolts with hitch pins for easy change out and put the stop on in place of the bucket. You could also bungee a stop to the bucket since all of the force would keep it on anyway. Does anyone else have some thoughts on this?

Bob, I was thinking what you said about taking off the bucket and using the cylinder and the thumb. That could work if the thumb was thick and strong. Instead of the bucket, I was thinking of a half moon piece of 3/4 steel, pivoting in the center , with the bottom half of the moon sharpened, allowing it to close on the thumb, cutting or slicing limbs, etc. The cylinder would be attached to the unsharpened end of the half moon piece of steel, forcing the half moon cutter to close and open. I can't get into my drawing right now or I would try and designed this thing.
 
   / Tree Shear #8  
J_J said:
Bob, I was thinking what you said about taking off the bucket and using the cylinder and the thumb. That could work if the thumb was thick and strong. Instead of the bucket, I was thinking of a half moon piece of 3/4 steel, pivoting in the center , with the bottom half of the moon sharpened, allowing it to close on the thumb, cutting or slicing limbs, etc. The cylinder would be attached to the unsharpened end of the half moon piece of steel, forcing the half moon cutter to close and open. I can't get into my drawing right now or I would try and designed this thing.

J_J, I am not sure I can visualize that. Do you mean the two half moons would close on each other to cut the branch. That sounds good. I would love to see the drawings when they are ready. I think I can make something real easy and cheap. I need to get some 3/4 inch steel though.
 
   / Tree Shear #9  
BobRip said:
J_J, I am not sure I can visualize that. Do you mean the two half moons would close on each other to cut the branch. That sounds good. I would love to see the drawings when they are ready. I think I can make something real easy and cheap. I need to get some 3/4 inch steel though.


Bob, My Turbocad program has vanished, so here is a basic drawing .

When looking at drawing, press the ALT key and use the mouse wheel to expand.
 

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   / Tree Shear
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Maybe something like that might work. Use it to take bites out of the tree
until you get to the bottom.
 

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