In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Firewood tractors

Discussion in 'Chainsaws and Power Equipment' started by D2082, Mar 1, 2015.

  1. Gasifier

    Gasifier

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    Here are a few shots of my latest tractor at work. Kubota L35 with the front loader converted to a Quick Attach so I can switch back and forth between bucket and forks easily.
     

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  2. WaddleRemodel

    WaddleRemodel

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    My Case 85 xt with my dump trailer. Looking for a grapple this year. Nicknamed backsaver image.jpg
     
  3. Stinny

    Stinny

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    Good thing you can't see the seat... she's perty torn up... :emb: MasterMech could tell what the differences are between the 500 and the 575, I'm sure. With decent maintenance, I can see this thing lasting way past my grandsons... :BrianK:
     
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  4. cnice_37

    cnice_37

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    I bought the chain & binder style that slip over the cutting edge but are secured by chains wrapping over the bucket. They are under $200 IIRC off eBay with the binders.

    They work and the bucket shows no wear. Pallet forks get so much use, worthwhile investment for me.
     
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  5. StickBender

    StickBender

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    Thanks, that looks like a better set up than just bolting on. Just order a set minus binders $105 shipped. I can find some used binders.
     
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  6. dgeesaman

    dgeesaman

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    Bought this when we moved into the farm in 2013. Moving manure, clearing snow, dragging the arena, moving hay, and now moving cut rounds to my splitting pile.

    Hope to get a set of QA forks in the next couple of weeks. I'm planning to stack all of my split wood onto 4x4 pallets of 1/4 cord each. Then this thing with forks will allow me to avoid moving it by hand from that point onward.
     

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  7. dgeesaman

    dgeesaman

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    Be careful - the capacity of a loader is strongly affected by how far out the load sits. The clamp-on forks themselves work fine, but you have less total lifting capacity due to the weight sitting out beyond the bucket, plus capacity lost by having both a bucket and forks mounted. Skidsteer Quick-attach is perfect since it allows you to use any attachment free of "baggage" and you don't have to mount anything by hand.

    David
     
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  8. TurboDiesel

    TurboDiesel

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  9. StickBender

    StickBender

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    Yea I have read about that, I don't plan on lifting anything crazy. It's a small tractor anyways, I don't expect much out of it. But, boy is it handy finally finding a loader for it!
     
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  10. TurboDiesel

    TurboDiesel

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  11. cnice_37

    cnice_37

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    X2. I max at 700# supposedly but had just enough with my box blade as ballast to pull off my snowblower (400-450#) amd tell the old man to gun the pickup before I ding the truck and tip the tractor! Light in the pants are these CUTS.
     
  12. dgeesaman

    dgeesaman

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    Well keep in mind the other factor - rear weight. The farther out your load, the more weight you need in back. Small tractors are easily limited by rear weight more than the loader itself.

    I guess one thing impressed me trying to push/lift logs with my tractor - that wood is heavier than it looks. Even to just roll it sometimes. So every lb of lifting capacity gets used with firewood - might as well maximize what your rig can do.
     
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  13. RParrotte

    RParrotte

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    There are several manufactures of 3-pt winches. Farmi, Uni-Forest, Wallenstein, just to name a few. They are so handy in the woods. Beats the heck out of backing up to a log to chain up to the drawbar!
    Yes Farmi is still in business. My brother just bought a new Farmi winch last summer.
     
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  14. D2082

    D2082

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    Thanks for the info. Looking them up online now...
     
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  15. Deacon

    Deacon

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    Can't believe that I only have this 1 pic of my kubota.
    Unloading some free mulch this fall.
    image.jpg
     
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  16. RParrotte

    RParrotte

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    image.jpg Mine is a Farmi. Early 70's I believe. Still works great.
     
  17. Stinny

    Stinny

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    Nice log hauler right there... :yes:
     
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  18. boettg33

    boettg33

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    Growing up with a 1956 Allis-Chalmers for plowing the fields at the family nursery. Unfortunately my dad sold that land and the tractor.
     
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  19. D2082

    D2082

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    Awesome. After seeing retail prices on new ones, I believe I'll keep lookout for a good used one here locally. Not a huge timber area here but there are some decent sized operations around. That one looks well-built for sure.
     
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  20. boettg33

    boettg33

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    That is it? Three pages? My mouth is watering. I guess I'll have to go find tractor page to satisfy my need for more pics. At least until you guys have time to add more.