Hooking up a chain

/ Hooking up a chain #1  

thunder86

Silver Member
Joined
Sep 9, 2019
Messages
139
Location
Southern Indiana
Tractor
Bobcat ct4045
Where do you guys hook a chain up to on the back of the tractor to pull out stumps and so forth? Thank you.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #2  
Where do you guys hook a chain up to on the back of the tractor to pull out stumps and so forth? Thank you.
Use a clevis etc. on the drawbar that is below the axle...do not use the 3PH...
 
/ Hooking up a chain #6  
Emphasis on BELOW the axle. If you hook above the axle you run the risk of turning the tractor over on yourself.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #7  
Emphasis on BELOW the axle. If you hook above the axle you run the risk of turning the tractor over on yourself.

:thumbsup:

Using a cross-drawbar and clevis on the 3 point hitch arms is ok (they're made for pulling), just make sure drawbar height stays below axle.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #8  
Your tractor only weighs a bit over 1600 pounds (not including loader); I hope your "stumps" are no more than 3-4" in diameter and either 3-4 feet TALL and/or in soft soil... Steve
 
/ Hooking up a chain #9  
I made an inverted `T` that fitted onto the rear three point linkage. It is made of scaffold pole with the right size pins welded to the bottom for the draught arms and two bits of flat at the top with a pin for the top link. Now to attach a chain, I welded a couple of pins about one inch long, and just wide enough for a chain to lay side ways between the pins. I got my chain and found a shackle to fit the end link of the chain. To pull up my bushes, I backed up to the bush. Drop the arms as low as they will go, Then pass the chain around the base of the bush and feed the chain through the shackle. Next I used to pull the chain as tight as it would go and take the loose end and wrap it a full turn of the bottom bar of my inverted `T`, and drop a link between the two pins. By lifting the arms, this would pull on the bush. To be fair, I had to be careful some times my tractor wheels would come off the ground, and some of the bushes did not give up easily. They got special treatment by me lifting on the arms, and driving forward and then backwards into the bush whilst at the same time lifting. The first chain I used was not strong enough so I found a tougher one.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #10  
Well - I SURE as H*LL wouldn't consider pulling any stump around here. Average stump is 24". When I use a chain to pull - a big clevis on the draw bar. I've used chain to pull the remains of the old homestead building out and burn. Too many nails & spikes to get in close with the grapple. The old homesteader had a fetish for big nails and spikes.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #11  
Well - I SURE as H*LL wouldn't consider pulling any stump around here. Average stump is 24". When I use a chain to pull - a big clevis on the draw bar. I've used chain to pull the remains of the old homestead building out and burn. Too many nails & spikes to get in close with the grapple. The old homesteader had a fetish for big nails and spikes.

Pull a 24" stump, no problem! Just leave the stump long.....about 20 feet long and chain or cable at the top!

'If you give me a lever and a place to stand, I can move the world.' - Archimedes (born c. 287 B.C. - died 212B.C.) ..or something like that...

Here the problem isn't flipping tractor backwards. It's the more you pull , the less traction you have (on back tires). Use 4 wheel squeal. I've always ran out of traction before the rear tires lifted. The longer the cable, the less the lift, better the traction.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #12  
Pull a 24" stump, no problem! Just leave the stump long.....about 20 feet long and chain or cable at the top!

'If you give me a lever and a place to stand, I can move the world.' - Archimedes (born c. 287 B.C. - died 212B.C.) ..or something like that...

Here the problem isn't flipping tractor backwards. It's the more you pull , the less traction you have (on back tires). Use 4 wheel squeal. I've always ran out of traction before the rear tires lifted. The longer the cable, the less the lift, better the traction.

I think you’re underestimating the hold of a stump that big.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #13  
I think you’re underestimating the hold of a stump that big.

Ehh...depends.
...my point being don't underestimate the mechanical advantage of leverage (cabling to high point in tree).
Yes, 24" is getting pretty big when using a 8000- 9000lb tractor, 1/2" cable, 16'-20' of leverage. I've pulled maples approaching that size, but couldn't budge smaller diameter spruce. At some point you just start snapping cables, hooks, tree trunks, etc...
Ultimately, it depends on soil, type of tree (roots), angle of pull, weight of pull vehicle, traction, etc....
 
/ Hooking up a chain #14  
:thumbsup:

Using a cross-drawbar and clevis on the 3 point hitch arms is ok (they're made for pulling), just make sure drawbar height stays below axle.

This is really not OK...the pulling force on the tractor is still at the level of the 3PH pins regardless of the level of the end of the arms...

The 3PH is only made to pull correctly sized attachments for a particular sized tractor...
 
/ Hooking up a chain #15  
I don't pull stumps, I use a stump grinder to grind it down below ground level, all I have left is a pile of sawdust.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #16  
Correct. I'd also recommend getting an old auto/pickup wheel and run the chain over it. That will provide some mechanical advantage.

For safety, I'd put a sheet of plywood mounted somehow behind your seat to stop the chain if it comes loose or breaks. Dad was pulling our Olds one time with the tractor from the front. Chain broke and luckily fell just short of the windshield but put a nice chain-like pattern in the hood of the Olds.

Ralph
 
/ Hooking up a chain #17  
OK - Coby. All my trees - and I DO mean every one of them - is a Ponderosa pine. I have many hundreds on my 80 here. How in the name of H*LL am I going to cut down an ancient Ponderosa pine up 20 off the ground. It's tricky enough just cutting them at ground level.

FWIW - I had to fall & burn one this summer. Pine bark beetle infestation. I don't have a pic of the stump but it is 36" on the butt - 8" up off the ground. If my neighbor saw me climbing that pine( BTW - it was 117 feet tall ) to cut it off at the 20 foot level---------- the men in the white coats would have been waiting at the bottom to take me away.

I don't know what you would plan on using to pull a 20' tall stump like that over with. I know my Kubota M6040 @ 10,100# wouldn't stand a Ghosts chance in H*LL.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #18  
You're responding to a question about how to hook up a chain.
Let that sink in for a bit.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #19  
I have pulled some up to 10 inches, BUT you have to leave the rest of the tree attached, Chain high and use a really long chain, AND the soil conditions must be just right. Soft enough to get it leaning and the weight of the rest of the tree helps you get it over. All very "iffy". I have pulled over many 3 and 4 inch types. BUT it also depends on species and whether any roots are in cracks in the bedrock. I have seen 4 inches I could not pull. I pull from the fixed drawbar at the bottom of the tractor. It also helps a lot if your tractor can be pointing downhill away from the "victim." The stump grinder is NOT a bad idea.
 
/ Hooking up a chain #20  
By the way I have a 6 incher about a foot high I have hooked on to many times in favorable conditions with my tractor ballast on and total weight about 6600 lbs and with the tractor pointing downhill, it still laughs at me. It is starting to show some signs of rot and I try it every now an then. I will get it some day, but nothing so far. But a 24 incher cut close to the ground. If you could get a big cable around it I suppose you could use it to moor the Titanic. You sure aren't pulling it with any thing I own or have ever owned.
 

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