joecool85
Addicted to ArboristSite
Ahh! You are more fortunate than I am
Ken
Thanks to my family The land is my uncle's 80 acre wood lot. I am definetely fortunate, my Grandfather gave me my tractor.
Ahh! You are more fortunate than I am
Ken
A 12 volt winch is a cheap tool, with it and a length of chain or two, you can move logs to safer locations to continue to "land" the logs.
I just reply again, with your conditions, there may be many ways? What works best is effective minimal handling of the wood before it is consumed by the end user.....
Learn what you are doing,take your time ,be thinking all the time and be careful.That 40 is about the same as an 8n ford and personally,I'm not fond of either one(too light for my tastes or uses) but people have used them for over a half a century and got along good with them so after you learn to use the tractor and get comfortable with it,you will be fine.Good luck to you.Only run chains year round if necessary. They do wear out eventually. Getting pushed down a hill by your trailer is not really an issue if you use a little common sense. I cannot see a datsun bed trailer being loaded heavy enough for this to happen anyways.
Do you have much experience operating this tractor? That's the most important thing! You need the seat time and confidence to act if the tractor does start doing its own thing. Happy Hauling! I love playing with the old Deere's!
A farm tractor is not a skidder. That said, you can skid with it but you should use GOOGLE and educate yourself about the dangers and shortcomings of using a farm tractor to skid in the woods. Some of the things that can happen will only happen once and you won't get another chance to learn the hard way because you won't be alive.
Some practical things I can think of is farm tractor tires are not as durable as skidder tires. The sidewalls are much easier to damage and tires are expensive. Skidder wheels have protection for the valve stem, farm tractor wheels do not and emptying the brine, dismounting the tire, modifying the wheel, remounting the tire and filling it with brine again is expensive. This was told to me by a logger that grew up on a farm. He has a skidder and he is aware of the problems with tractors.
This was just the tip of the iceberg. As I said, GOOGLE for answers.
Learn what you are doing,take your time ,be thinking all the time and be careful.That 40 is about the same as an 8n ford and personally,I'm not fond of either one(too light for my tastes or uses) but people have used them for over a half a century and got along good with them so after you learn to use the tractor and get comfortable with it,you will be fine.Good luck to you.
Oh trust me, I know all about the dangers of skidding with a tractor, that's why I'm looking at other options. The biggest problem with skidding is that you can catch the log on something it will damn near instantly flip the tractor over. There are other problems as well if you are near hills, like the log can start rolling down the hill and pull the tractor over with it. Plus the general annoyances like the log getting all dirty from dragging it, then when you cut it, it dulls you chain real quick. It looks like I'll be using the trailer and I will cut the logs to firewood length, load them in the trailer, then swap the trailer onto my truck and go home.
As for the tires, it's not that hard to mount a tire on a 40T, but it is expensive for sure if you have to buy a new one. I won't be running "brine" or anything else in my tires other than air though, so that's one less step.
We try to do all of the woodlot work in winter on hard or snowy ground---no bugs, no heat, no wet feet, and it's soooo manly to work in winter.
Common sense? True. It depends on the terrain. On our farm, most anything flat enough for a tractor is pasture. The woods only start where it goes downhill from there (too steep for a tractor.) Some of it is negoitable with a bulldozer, some of it isn't
Maybe I'm too safety conscious (I know I prefer to error on the side of safety), but some of our trails (done with a bulldozer), I won't even take a tractor and bushhog to mow them when they are dry.