Building a Boom Pole - thoughts?

   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #21  
Boggen

Here's some pic of my attempt

Forget a hand crank, I got a 12vdc 1 ton winch from HF.

Unloading shipping container
View attachment 273394


placing roof panels
View attachment 273395


moving 8x12 4000 gal tank
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placing 25ft roof panels
View attachment 273397

David Sent from my iPad using TractorByNet

*cool!* with backhoe for a bonus! to lift stuff, but also as counter weight with boom on the FEL!

nice use of quick attach on FEL as well!

lifts high enough to help set rafters for a new shed or house edition as well!

12v winch... WOW! though looking at length, could really understand why! trying to barely tap the FEL joystick or levers, for a very small adjustment can be rather difficult with boom sticking that far out. 12v winch, i bet really helps out lower or raise the metal sheeting for the roof!
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #22  
I did not build it. Local JD dealer got a tractor in with same loader as mine (640) and 4 attachments besides the bucket.They had two types of bale spears, pallet fork and the boom pole. I wanted the pallet forks but we could not agree on price. I asked how much for the boom pole and he said not much demand for them. $150. I bought it on the spot. It's made to go on a loader in place of the bucket. It telescopes, I am guessing 4', from approx, 7' to 11'. I have not measured it yet. I did do one modification, that was to weld a hook on the end. It has a pintle hitch on the boom end.
 

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   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #23  
I did not build it. Local JD dealer got a tractor in with same loader as mine (640) and 4 attachments besides the bucket.They had two types of bale spears, pallet fork and the boom pole. I wanted the pallet forks but we could not agree on price. I asked how much for the boom pole and he said not much demand for them. $150. I bought it on the spot. It's made to go on a loader in place of the bucket. It telescopes, I am guessing 4', from approx, 7' to 11'. I have not measured it yet. I did do one modification, that was to weld a hook on the end. It has a pintle hitch on the boom end.

Thats one heck of a deal !
That things a BEAST !!!!!!!!!!! :thumbsup:


Boone
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #24  
While it's show & tell, betcha never seen a jib pole do this. I built this pole about 8 yrs. ago, it has close to 7' telescoping legnth. Then I built the "roof rake" tip (the rusty part) when I put the lean to on the shop. As much as I was hoping, a 3/12 roof pitch will not shed the snow. It will reach about 28' (for lifting) when it is near vertical and the SS boom up all the way, but the most fun is sticking it out over the pond for a rope swing.:laughing: That is after the ice and snow are long gone. Pretty handy for setting trusses if there is not too much "reach" needed.
 

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   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #25  
While it's show & tell, betcha never seen a jib pole do this. I built this pole about 8 yrs. ago, it has close to 7' telescoping legnth. Then I built the "roof rake" tip (the rusty part) when I put the lean to on the shop. As much as I was hoping, a 3/12 roof pitch will not shed the snow. It will reach about 28' (for lifting) when it is near vertical and the SS boom up all the way, but the most fun is sticking it out over the pond for a rope swing.:laughing: That is after the ice and snow are long gone. Pretty handy for setting trusses if there is not too much "reach" needed.

Now that is a boom pole!
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts?
  • Thread Starter
#26  
ZebraFive,

Do you know off-hand what diameter and wall thickness that steel tubing is for the boom portion?

Thanks!
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #27  
American TD. For normal tractor pole "chores" use at least 1/4" wall on your tubing.... that should be at least 3x3 or 2x4 with the 4" dimension in the vertical position. I am concerned that you sound somewhat new to welding and fabrication, and that any lifting device may not be the place to get your practice in. Please do not take offense to my comment if you are only carefully planning your project. Sounds like you are scrounging for materials, good idea as "store bought" poles are very cheap and hard to beat $$ wise. With scrap so high, scrounging is getting hard, but even a small 6" or so I beam will work, so will a 3" pipe with some extra bracing. For your dimensions on the 3pt, just copy from one of your other implements or there is a web page that I found with a search that has all the "std" dimensions and pin sizes listed. :thumbsup:
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #28  
ZebraFive,

Do you know off-hand what diameter and wall thickness that steel tubing is for the boom portion?

Thanks!

The inner, moveable section, is 3" x 3" square tubing, 1/4" wall. It's here at my shop to weld the hook on. The rest is out at the farm. I'll measure next time I am out there.
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #29  
The inner, moveable section, is 3" x 3" square tubing, 1/4" wall. It's here at my shop to weld the hook on. The rest is out at the farm. I'll measure next time I am out there.

The tube the inner section slides into is 3 1/2" square tubing 3/16" or .180 wall.

I found on the Horst website; total weight 320 lbs, capacity collapsed 3000 lbs, extend 1500 lbs.
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #30  
P1010782.JPGP1010785.JPGHere is a picture of my boom pole build. I made mine to fit on my forks. Works great!
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #32  
This is one I made last year using an old bloat trailer tongue. It iw 2X4X3/16". 8" long and 22" tall.

1/4X4" base plate and 1" water pipe for side stiffeners. 1/2" round stock for stiffener on top. Cat 2 draw bar. Four 3/4" bolts hold boom to draw bar. When I got the base plate bolted onto draw bar I tacked each bolt head in three places and only need one wrench to take it off. But the draw bar is dedicated to the boom so I haven't needed to take it off...YET !


The box metal was already gavanized so I cleaned it all up good and put 5 coats of spray galvanized paint on it. Minor rust around some of the welds. but still holding up.

I use it on a L3200.



tractor_boom_1.jpg
 
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   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #33  
Hello,

Did a search but didn't see too much about this.

I think a boom pole would be very useful. Yes, I have seen the $75-100 ones on craigslist. However, they are usually beat up, bent up, and often light duty. I figured that I will try to find a cheap source for metal, and by manufacturing my own, work on my welding skills.

I'd like to build one loosely similar to the King Kutter HD model. If I find steel second-hand somewhere, do I need to be concerned about the grade? I assume a 3x3 or 3x4 tube is going to be sufficient as long as the metal is straight and not cracked or otherwise damaged.

Any thoughts or concerns about building my own boom pole similar to this? If anything, I will err on the side of extra metal and strength. Anyone know what thickness their tube is - maybe 1/4"? I will go with a minimum of whatever the commercial builders use to be safe.

Also - although I am not this far into the design yet - does anyone happen to have a chart showing the proper dimensions for 3-pt attachment points that are also QH and iMatch compatible? If not, I'll gather it all and put it together, but thought maybe there's a chart with all the dimensions in one place.

I use the boom off my post hole digger, don't recommend lifting too heavy a load, a little common sense you know . if you're gonna build remember to consider metal quality, too soft could get you hurt.
 
   / Building a Boom Pole - thoughts? #34  
An older thread but it was so "on-topic" that I thought I would restart it rather than create a new one.

I am looking for a boom pole for a few uses and can't seem to buy a good fit (and price) so I'm looking to design one and then get a local welder to make it.

I have the regular uses for moving equipment, loading/unloading out of the truck box, and the occasional assistance in a building project. These seem to be well served with the regular 3 point boom poles one sees advertised and sold at dealers. At times I will want good height, so moving it to the FEL makes sense and with a SSQA -> 3PH adapter seems possible - and still without any fabbing. But once I starting thinking about having one, new uses come to mind.

I have 3 submersible pumps that I drop into my pond and canal every spring and pull-out every winter (and sometime mid-season if there are issues). I have always man-handled them but they are heavy, awkward and the water's cold early in the spring! Which is why it's a job that I postpone until I have to do it - which is frequently a bad approach. A boom that can reach 10-12 feet and mounted on the FEL should do this easily. But that size would probably get in the way of the other jobs, so a telescoping boom would seem ideal.

The only one I could track down through my local dealer was the HLA boom, which Zebrafive picked up, and it was special order so it would be a blind order.

The tube the inner section slides into is 3 1/2" square tubing 3/16" or .180 wall.

I found on the Horst website; total weight 320 lbs, capacity collapsed 3000 lbs, extend 1500 lbs.

You got a great deal - I was quoted over $1400 to buy that unit! I'm glad I finally got to see a real pic - it's more than the dealer could give me. It's more capacity than I need, more money than I hope to spend and I'd like to be able to use it with the strength of the 3PH at times.


So my questions:

1. AmericanTractorDrive - did you build your boom? Did you model it after the Horst boom?

2. Telescoping - any more examples of this? Would 2"X2" hitch style steel or the larger receiver steel provide enough strength for the telescoping portion - say a 6 foot extension (he asks knowing nothing about metalworking and steel)?

3. If it's telescoping then it would have an accessible square tube at the end, I am thinking that I could have different "ends" to plug in for the situation - kinda like the "bucket buddy" - anyone have examples - good or bad?

4. To get a straight vertical lift/drop, I am thinking a hoist/winch is necessary - I've seen a couple of mentions of a boom/winch combo but I haven't found any good pics on how the winch or pulleys were mounted. Suggestions?

5. Am I making this too complicated?
 

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