Debris Forks

   / Debris Forks #1  

akadave

Bronze Member
Joined
Apr 13, 2009
Messages
50
I've been seeing a lot of pop up ads recently for clamp on debris forks. I looked into them and am considering getting a set. They are under $200 for the five foot version. Looking for input from guys who have used them as to whether they are worth purchasing. I realize they are light duty.

I do have dedicated pallet forks which I haven't used much recently but are very handy at times. I also have a grapple which is also not used too often anymore since most of my land clearing is done and I'm not looking to buy more land. I'm looking at the debris forks more as a bucket extension for things like putting up fencing where they'll provide a place to lay posts while still having the bucket available for smaller items that won't sit well on the pallet forks, or moving small amounts of brush etc where getting out the grapple takes more time than just taking multiple small loads in the bucket.

It's not a money or storage issue. Just wondering what those of you who have used them have to say. Thanks.
 
   / Debris Forks #2  
I went this route because like you I had an extra set of forks laying about. It's okay, nowhere near as functional as a grapple. But for a cheap attachment it will clamp on whatever you get your forks under. Mine was too quick making it hard to control. I wound up putting a restrictor inline.
 

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   / Debris Forks #3  
I have a set of hand crafted debris forks and they are probably the most use implement on my tractor after FEL, I am continually clearing land to reduce fire fuel and use them to make brush piles for burning...

forks-1-jpg.686036


My only regret is I built them to lightweight, they are 1-1/2 x 1-1/2 x .140 inch steel and I should have made then 2 x 2 x 1/4 inch tube

Later mod...

DSC02292-s.jpg



And yes a grapple or some sort of "clamp" (maybe electrical actuator to cause clamp to come down like a clamshell) to keep from having brush fall off forks would be useful... Maybe this winter...
 
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   / Debris Forks
  • Thread Starter
#4  
I ordered them. $125 bucks with a $50 off coupon on eBay for a 60" set. We'll see how they work out.
 

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   / Debris Forks #5  
I ordered them. $125 bucks with a $50 off coupon on eBay for a 60" set. We'll see how they work out.
I have been curious, but not enough to actually order them. Let us know what you think when they come in.
 
   / Debris Forks #6  
I can see those working well and being convenient to use.
I get by with regular pallet forks, and after training my neighbors on how to layout brush piles they work well enough for my use.
 
   / Debris Forks #7  
I have the similar debris forks from Titan - they are HD and add 2' to the front of the bucket and are handy for brush and picking up piles of brush so you dont have to load by hand. Are also good for logs too, but I have the HD bucket with 3/4" cutting edge which makes it less susceptible to bending,

They can pick up pallets but not loaded to heavy as the tines don't go all the way in. Very handy to have around.
 
   / Debris Forks #8  
I get by well with my HLA single arm log grapple. I just push into the debris pile and it all seems to crunch down into a wad that stays together.
I highly recommend this attachment to anyone that moves a lot of brush piles. Extremely well engineered and powerful.

1760875974447.jpeg
 
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   / Debris Forks #9  
As mentioned, forks are something that get used frequently.

I made an inexpensive but usable set to clamp onto the bucket of an L3200 I had. Made a olarger and more capable set for the L4240 from bale spears and QA frame. The chains on the front of the L3200 forks weren't for holding the forks. They were the "self-install" method. To install them, the bucket was dumped over the forks as they laid on the ground. The chains (one end permanently attached to the forks) were dropped into the slotted angle on the top of the bucket. Curling the bucket lifted the forks and the clip angles caught on the cutting edge. They were then fastened to the bucket with a load binder on the back side of the bucket.

The L4240 forks are much better. Easy on and off via the QA frame. They even worked as a crude crane with a 10' piece of 3" EMT and some chains. I set it up to catch pieces of a dead tree at the creek and when the one large piece fell, it drove the conduit back into the fork structure and the gusset acted like a Kett Shear till the end of the conduit bottomed against the QA frame..
 

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   / Debris Forks
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I have the similar debris forks from Titan - they are HD and add 2' to the front of the bucket and are handy for brush and picking up piles of brush so you dont have to load by hand. Are also good for logs too, but I have the HD bucket with 3/4" cutting edge which makes it less susceptible to bending,

They can pick up pallets but not loaded to heavy as the tines don't go all the way in. Very handy to have around.
I bought these to fit my HD 73" bucket. Hopefully they will fail before the bucket in the event I get too ambitious with them. 😁 I do have a standard duty 53" bucket but honestly it never gets used. I debated whether to buy smaller debris forks to fit either but decided wider would be more useful for my intended use.

I'm looking at them more as a mobile work bench and for projects where neither the forks or bucket are ideal because of a variety of materials. A place to set boards, fence posts with the bucket available for hand tools, screws. I often work on my fences and find there's no good place to put small things with the forks on but no good place to carry posts with only the bucket.

I think I'll get enough use to to justify what I paid.
 
 

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