Don't do it.

   / Don't do it. #1  

scootr

Super Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2022
Messages
8,603
Location
Temecula California
Tractor
Kubota MX5200 HST, 773 Bobcat, Cat forklift
Neighbor lady called yesterday wanting me to bring the MX over and pull a gate post out. Knowing how rock hard our clay and rock soil is I declined and suggested they dig down some and cut it off.
20 minutes later I see my neighbor roar off the hill and down the road in her direction in his new Yanmar.
Today that tractor neighbor calls me explaining that he bent the loader and sprung a quick attachment pin or plate on the machine. He explained that he will cut one loader arm off and weld it back on to reposition it.
Sorry to hear his misfortune. It's easy to exceed the loader capacity trying to pull something out of the ground.
If your neighbor asks you to do this just say no.
 
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   / Don't do it. #2  
Over the years had neighbors ask but I smarten up quick and year early,size up job and say yes or no and offer advice...gotta go with your gut feelings.
 
   / Don't do it.
  • Thread Starter
#4  
The lift capacity on these Kubota type loaders is really pretty anemic. I like the wheel lift idea for post pulling but I never had the opportunity to try it
 
   / Don't do it. #6  
Was he using the loader without an implement on and chaining straight to the quick connect?
 
   / Don't do it.
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Somebody did a good job of setting the gate post.
Turns out it was a steel post in concrete. How much I don't know but the clay soil here locks everything down when it is really wet and when it is really dry, like it is now. So you are trying to pull the post, the concrete, and all the hardened soil 3 ft around it.
 
   / Don't do it.
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Was he using the loader without an implement on and chaining straight to the quick connect?
I understand one side of the stump bucket was pulled from the QA after the loader arm bent.
 
   / Don't do it. #9  
I learned that early on. I had a clothesline post I wanted to pull so hooked onto it with the loader. I then proceeded to lift the rear end of my L275 off the ground.
I have since realized that a metal post driven into the ground will create a nice ball of rust under the sod.
 
   / Don't do it.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I learned that early on. I had a clothesline post I wanted to pull so hooked onto it with the loader. I then proceeded to lift the rear end of my L275 off the ground.
I have since realized that a metal post driven into the ground will create a nice ball of rust under the sod.
I had one driven into winter wet clay. Many years later I could not pull it, not even with the 5k forklift :oops: So I dug down around it cut it off, haven't seen it since ;)
 
   / Don't do it. #11  
When I pull t-posts I use the 3ph not the loader bucket. I attach the chain to a rear blade and lift straight up. Either it will pull the post or stop the implement, but it won’t break anything if the attachment is centered on the blade.
 
   / Don't do it. #12  
One time I tried to pull a simple T post with the loader. Had the heavy box blade on the back and it lifted the rear off the ground.
 
   / Don't do it. #13  
One thing I have come to appreciate about a low-powered tractor without much hydraulic power, it is hard to tear anything up. The loader just runs out of power before bending anything or lifting the rear end.
 
   / Don't do it. #15  
Really! the back lift on most tractors has double the lifting power of the FEL,

I started with tractors without FEL, so didn't get an early dose of bad practices.

A fence post only needs to pull out about 8 inches before it gets easy.
 
   / Don't do it. #16  
Turns out it was a steel post in concrete. How much I don't know but the clay soil here locks everything down when it is really wet and when it is really dry, like it is now. So you are trying to pull the post, the concrete, and all the hardened soil 3 ft around it.
Yep, a bit north of you but when it wet it's like quick sand when dry like concrete...
 
   / Don't do it. #18  
Several years ago I was pulling old fence posts with the loader, which was fine for the line posts. Switched to the 3 point for the concreted corners and pulled a real bone-head move...
I threaded an old section of 9k climbing rope through the lower hitch arm mounts for the pull, and snapped off the 3 point arm case mounting point due to the force pulling the lower arms together. That ended up costing me $2k.
 
   / Don't do it. #19  
my go to is an old tire rim (the larger the better) without the tire on it. attach a chain to the post as low as you can, place a 2X10 on the ground put the rim down on its rounded side with the chain over it then attach the other end of the chain to the draw bar on the tractor and pull.
 
   / Don't do it.
  • Thread Starter
#20  
my go to is an old tire rim (the larger the better) without the tire on it. attach a chain to the post as low as you can, place a 2X10 on the ground put the rim down on its rounded side with the chain over it then attach the other end of the chain to the draw bar on the tractor and pull.
I was thinking about this method recently and wondering if you couldn't do the same backing the tractor rear wheel up to the post, Chaining up the post the draping the chain over the tractor tire then putting the rest of the chin under the tire, so moving forward would walk the chain pulling the post up. What think yee?
 

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