Bullwinkle123
Platinum Member
When using pallet forks or other attachments where one end of the attachment is far from the other, what are the equations to calculate effective load? (Whether it's loader or 3ph)
For example, the rear of my rotary cutter is 8-9 feet from the 3PH, and the front edge of my new bucket is over 4 feet from the loader pin. Is there equation I can use (with simplifying generalizations where possible) to calculate how much load I can manage?
I have two primary cases where I'd like to know:
1) When using my pallet forks and/or new (very deep) bucket. Taking the simple case of a pallet, how many pounds can my LA1065 loader (~2300 lbs at pin) lift with a load uniformly distributed across the pallet?
2) I'd like to make a rear ballast that has at least the same ballast value as my 700 lb but very long rotary cutter but in a much more compact form so I can maneuver. Actually, I'd like to add quite a bit more ballast value than my rear attachments provide, which is why I'd make one - but for starters understanding some simplified math with the rotary-cutter-ballast-replacement scenarios is probably informative.
For example, the rear of my rotary cutter is 8-9 feet from the 3PH, and the front edge of my new bucket is over 4 feet from the loader pin. Is there equation I can use (with simplifying generalizations where possible) to calculate how much load I can manage?
I have two primary cases where I'd like to know:
1) When using my pallet forks and/or new (very deep) bucket. Taking the simple case of a pallet, how many pounds can my LA1065 loader (~2300 lbs at pin) lift with a load uniformly distributed across the pallet?
2) I'd like to make a rear ballast that has at least the same ballast value as my 700 lb but very long rotary cutter but in a much more compact form so I can maneuver. Actually, I'd like to add quite a bit more ballast value than my rear attachments provide, which is why I'd make one - but for starters understanding some simplified math with the rotary-cutter-ballast-replacement scenarios is probably informative.