Well done sir. You've got some good kindling wood there also I see. When do you usually start burning in the Great Northwest?
I try to hold off till 1/Oct just to preserve the wood pile. My Wif would have us burning the first moment she had a chill! I do relent if the weather is cold early. If I don't relent it gets even chillier!
Steve; That trailer looks Great. How did you do the axle? Looks like you have car/pickup wheels and tires on it.
If it moves your wood, it's all good man. Sometimes ya just have to make more trips to get it all home. Just gives ya more time on the quad. Besides, I've got a small dump cart behind my quad, it takes about 12 full loads to haul home a full cord of wood. So I purchased triaxle load of logs to save on "travel time".
Hey there, not too sure where he got the axle. Had a guy making them. All new material. And yes they usually just use old tires/rims from cars. A lot of guys sell these types of carts around these parts. And yes it is great. Very durable and can get anywhere the bike can.
Some of the smaller 5 lug hubs will take ford rims, so just rip the fenders off if not enough clearance and put the Ford rims on it.
Took me a bit to find this thread again! LOL But I had to share my new ATV hauler in this thread. Part late Birthday present and working some recent overtime present. This will be great for working alone and more importantly allow my son and I to work together on more projects. Should be great for our hobby farm chores, firewood, moving dirt and stone, etc. I spent the extra on the Heavy Duty model from this company. Tandem walking arm/axles and rated for 1800#. Flip up tailgate, foot pedal for dumping, and turns to the side about 45 degrees to dump as well.
I see an Earthquake up there on the shelf! ! Those are dam good saws for what they are and what we all paid.
Yup. I bought that off a guy a few years back with the first name of Pallet. Anybody with the first name of Pallet knows a good saw when he sees it!
Nice present. As you said, more importantly, being able to spend more time with your son. Good job, dad.