daTeacha
Veteran Member
I'm building a second floor on my deck. I will be setting 5, 16' 4x6 treated posts into holes 3' deep that are either in or immediately next to my existing deck. I have a DX 29 with the LA14 loader and a grapple on the bucket. There is a 900 lb. counterweight on the rear end. I am working alone.
I am planning to use the bucket/grapple to carry the posts around the house to the job site, then to lift, place, and set them. What I have in mind is to use a timber hitch or similar knot to tie the post to the grapple at a point about 10 feet from the bottom with the post perpendicular to the tractor. Then I'll lift the bucket, allowing the post to come to a more or less vertical position, hanging from the open grapple with the bucket curled back enough to keep the end off the ground -- the bucket will be pretty much all the way up at this juncture. The next step will be to drive gingerly to a point where the post bottom is more or less over the hole and through a combination of tilting the bucket, lowering the bucket, and moving the tractor -- plus a lot of off again and on again to see how things are lining up -- to lower the post into the hole where there is already some of the concrete waiting.
4 of the posts will have existing deck on one side of them and the 5th one will have existing boards on 3 sides when properly positioned.
Aside from the need to be very careful, does anyone see any obvious flaws with my plan? Does anyone have a better idea? A treated 16 foot 4 x 6 is going to weigh enough and be long enough that I can't just grab it and stand it on end by hand -- despite being 6'2'', I can't quite reach the tipping point of the things when trying to stand them up -- the bottom keeps going away. Besides, that wouldn't be nearly as much fun as using the tractor.
I am planning to use the bucket/grapple to carry the posts around the house to the job site, then to lift, place, and set them. What I have in mind is to use a timber hitch or similar knot to tie the post to the grapple at a point about 10 feet from the bottom with the post perpendicular to the tractor. Then I'll lift the bucket, allowing the post to come to a more or less vertical position, hanging from the open grapple with the bucket curled back enough to keep the end off the ground -- the bucket will be pretty much all the way up at this juncture. The next step will be to drive gingerly to a point where the post bottom is more or less over the hole and through a combination of tilting the bucket, lowering the bucket, and moving the tractor -- plus a lot of off again and on again to see how things are lining up -- to lower the post into the hole where there is already some of the concrete waiting.
4 of the posts will have existing deck on one side of them and the 5th one will have existing boards on 3 sides when properly positioned.
Aside from the need to be very careful, does anyone see any obvious flaws with my plan? Does anyone have a better idea? A treated 16 foot 4 x 6 is going to weigh enough and be long enough that I can't just grab it and stand it on end by hand -- despite being 6'2'', I can't quite reach the tipping point of the things when trying to stand them up -- the bottom keeps going away. Besides, that wouldn't be nearly as much fun as using the tractor.