I also have to say I just don't understand why no place that I know of in the south sells these things........surprising.
Shea
Shea
When I did mine the other night I had to use a medium pipe wrench, and I have some 36mm axle sockets that weren't close. Although we have two totally different brands of winch they sound close in shaft size.Yeah, 30mm seems to be the bolt/shaft size. I was still surprised that my adjustable wrench looked tiny compared to it.
That would be close to my bush measuring. I was guessing 47-48mm. So, a 2" adjustable it is. Thanks for the info.
Shea
The nearest dealer for mine is over 2 hrs away. Dealer requirements are very low but I am within his territory. Talking to the company rep who sets up the dealerships, they have a long way to go with saturating the market, not per him, but me. There version of dealer supported advertising was in my mind weak at best.I also have to say I just don't understand why no place that I know of in the south sells these things........surprising.
Shea
Nice picture, but I can't see the sled.I liked the hinged dozer blade on the Norse 4500 I believe it was.View attachment 492551
Lol.Nice picture, but I can't see the sled.
Does the blade hinge come into play mainly driving over stumps. I could see it helping if it was real tracked out.
Mine goes almost as high as my axles when set up properly on the tractor and thats on a CUT (kubota l3800).
Looks like that one rides plenty high as well.
Could you explain how you stack logs with it, never seen that beforethat I'm aware of.Lol.
The hinged dozer rides over ground obsticles like rocks and stumps, but can also be pinned so that it doesnt hinge.
In the hinged position it allows to stack logs and random firewood lengths on the landing.
Unhinged it works great as a trail building blade.
On the bottom of the blade at both ends are two curved 1/2" thick hooks, so while backing into a log and lifting at the same time, it allows stacking to a certain extent.Could you explain how you stack logs with it, never seen that beforethat I'm aware of.
So when you do that do you have the log choked like a third of the way down the log to help get the other end off the ground.On the bottom of the blade at both ends are two curved 1/2" thick hooks, so while backing into a log and lifting at the same time, it allows stacking to a certain extent.
While driving off said stack, the blade hinges so as not to undo what was already done.
I believe hes talking about stacking (decking) by basically pushing the logs into a stack, mostly done with cable skidders and their dozer blade...but its the same principle for a 3 point winch setup...So when you do that do you have the log choked like a third of the way down the log to help get the other end off the ground.
Mine has a hitch on it and I can use that to get the opposite end up pretty high doing that. I wish the PO would not have welded it to the skidder. I would like to be able to put a 6" drop hitch in it or have another piece that was designed to hold the butt down while lifting. Doing it like I do is sketchy as the log could come off the hitch and the opposite end will fall. Not a big deal, but more control is nice and I would carry logs out of the woods that way depending on the location instead of skidding them if time allowed. I also use this technique to load a trailer when the logs get heavy.
I believe hes talking about stacking (decking) by basically pushing the logs into a stack, mostly done with cable skidders and their dozer blade...but its the same principle for a 3 point winch setup...
here's a video that shows it pretty good, skip in to about 50 seconds...then in again to about 8 minutes in
I wish the PO would not have welded it to the skidder. I would like to be able to put a 6" drop hitch in it or have another piece that was designed to hold the butt down while lifting.
Hey Rob.I'd like to see a good pict. of it welded (how it's welded in), can you get me some??
SR
This a hitch that was added to mine by the PO. I have never used it . Not a close up, I will look at it and get closer pictures the next trip to the bush. I think it is welded to the upper winch unit as the lower plate can swing if you take out the locks for it. Norse 400 winch, B414 IH diesel, Power steering ,loaded rear tires. Old, reliable and not expensive.I'd like to see a good pict. of it welded (how it's welded in), can you get me some??
SR
I think I get uour wording, I must be tired also, maybe the cord of wood I just bucked and loaded.I see a pretty good crack in the first pict.... It NEEDS to be fixed!
Personally, I'd torch it out and make a huge improvement in it, welding in a female receiver tube so it would take std. slide in hitches...
I'm tired, so I may not have got all the wording right, but you know what I mean... lol
SR
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