Nope. For shovel logging shovels are used. Track mounted machines.
Ah , thanks Joe !! In most places it don,t hurt the ground ,just the humans who look at it
pushes the limbs over the cab and exhaust (sometimes integrated) you're driving through brush, tops, whatever. Can double as part of roll over and falling object protection.
tramp: the thing is that Astor probably costs as much as a descent used piece of conventional equip. And far less productive. Yes, moving costs, tract size, and "intangible" things like landowner preference, your preferences, and market differentiation, are somewhere invisible in the $/cord equation.
Sounds like you've found a balance in your system and much of any change will demand a significant increase in production. What that does for net profit is the question I guess.
what exactly would the 260 stihl be for?Sweeps look like this: (their the things on the front.)
Say, if you were picking high-grade hardwood,had a 2 saw plan (Say 460 and 260 stihl) and a 6-9 ton(maybe even a 12-14 ton?) mini ex for hoe chucking and 1-2 of these (with an op for each and a faller/bucker) you could get some decent porduction of 20-30" max high-grade hardwood.
The 260 is for the truck driver to put behind his seat for a while, then eventually take out and run over.... LMAO
No offense but those little toys wouldn;t mean much if you got to hook onto a tractor trailer and try to drag out of a mud hole or over a patch of ice. just yesetraday I was trying to pull a International Eagle pulling a self loading log trailer closer to the pile and he got his drives down in a hole and I couldn't pull him with the skidder, actually had to pull a head and winch him and he wasn;t even stuck real bad, didn't have rear chains on the skidder either. But if you got a bad spot and have to get a truck in and all you got to work with is a forecat or a iron horse you may as well tell the trucker to stay home. They would be good for firewood harvesting and that's about it. Also what if you got into a really rocky area, tracks just don't compete with rubber tires crawling over rocks. Also you would be a long time getting a truck load of wood out with that iron horse. for the price you pay for those toys u could probably find a good used skidder or even a dozer [/QUOTE
When you find a skidder or dozier that he can carry in the back of his one ton, let us know.
You are right tracks are in a whole different class than rubber tire tractors in steep rocky places. LMAO
. This week I grossed $ 1285.00 cutting ,yarding, loading and delivering , FIREWOOD .. Thats what I do !!!!!!..... Since I,m the trucker , and the truck is also my crummy , and there is only me , I better NOT GET IT STUCK .. My yarder is an Arctic Cat 440 Panther . with a sled I built on my deck from a 55 gal drum some 2x4 s and at first a pair of down hill skis with the bundings taken off ... They only lasted 7 cord .. I put P Tex plastic on and have since brought out 70 cord on that 1 sled ....Still works great .......No offense but those little toys wouldn;t mean much But if you got a bad spot and have to get a truck in and all you got to work with is a forecat or a iron horse you may as well tell the trucker to stay home. They would be good for firewood harvesting and that's about it. :
It sounds like you have a prtty good thing goin for ya.That forcat looks a better every time i see it on video.Have you herd anything about the durability of them?
Enter your email address to join: