Grapple up, now or later?

/ Grapple up, now or later? #21  
Make sure those hoses are well secured underneath. Rolling over slash is guaranteed to result in limbs getting kicked up into the underside of your tractor. Most of the time it doesn't harm a thing, but every now and then it does. I broke off a radiator hose port and bent my step rung badly while working slash.
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #22  
If your going to be working around downed limbs and trees you may want to re think the lines from the rear of the tractor. That much hydraulic hose with limbs and branches is an accident looking for a location. I am surprised the dealer didn't support the 3rd function now. Might want to look into an electric over hydraulic diverter. The dealer may be thinking something more involved, like a true 3rd circuit in the hydraulics. WR long makes kits and I am pretty sure Fasse does as well. Fasse is what my dealer installed for me and after reading the instructions it was basically plug and play it came with the correct bracket to mount it on my JD 4320 and they simply disconnected the lines for the curl circuit of the bucket and plugged them in the back of the diverter block and then plugged the curl function lines and the 3rd function lines in the front. They ran a power wire from the fuse box to the joystick for the switch. The only remotely complex part was the hard lines up the boom to their termination and they look like a kit from JD. Also with using the rear outlets you have to use 2 separate levers to operate your loader and your grapple. With the electric over hydraulic you push a button and switch between curl circuit and grapple. Keeping you hand in one spot can be very handy.

just my $.02
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #23  
Blitz,

I found myself in a very similar situation to yours several years back (over 150 acres of raw, recently timbered land with lots of tops) and opted to have the third function valve installed by the dealer and delivered with the new tractor. I have not regretted it for a moment! The grapple is the MOST used implement, second only to the box blade.

Good luck, be safe, and enjoy yourself!
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #24  
if budget is tight.

consider a set of pallet forks with an aftermarket thumb attached. this one is popular Shop Online

this keeps your overall weight down on the front, and allows you to pull double duty with one of your front implements.

the second upside to something like this is you can get a second base plate for it and weld it to your standard bucket thus putting a "grapple" on 2 items for half the cost. (you can only use one at a time anyway)
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #27  
Do it right the first time. Get the grapple and hard lines ran right from the start then don't look back. With 20 acres you'll use these more than you know.
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #28  
I'm wrestling with that same dilemma. Hard plumbing to the front, or hoses to the rear remotes? Separate circuit, or diverter? Which grapple to get, bucket and thumb, grapple bucket, or grapple rake? After all the research I've done, and from reading the comments here, I'm leaning toward Grapple rake (tighter closing/pinching on long unwieldy pieces), hard plumbing (to prevent damage to the hydraulic lines from slash) and diverter to toggle between rear and front remotes (I already have electric over hydraulic on the joystick). But it seems to be the most capable, safest, smoothest and fastest for swapping to other implement/functions. Feedback??
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #29  
If you already have electric over hydraulic on the joystick, why not just use that to operate your grapple and leave the rear remotes available for other duty?
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #30  
I'm wrestling with that same dilemma. Hard plumbing to the front, or hoses to the rear remotes? Separate circuit, or diverter? Which grapple to get, bucket and thumb, grapple bucket, or grapple rake? After all the research I've done, and from reading the comments here, I'm leaning toward Grapple rake (tighter closing/pinching on long unwieldy pieces), hard plumbing (to prevent damage to the hydraulic lines from slash) and diverter to toggle between rear and front remotes (I already have electric over hydraulic on the joystick). But it seems to be the most capable, safest, smoothest and fastest for swapping to other implement/functions. Feedback??

If you already have electric over hydraulic on the joystick, are those your controls for your rear remotes? It sounds like you want to run a diverter off of one of your rear remotes. Why? :confused3:
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #31  
I'm brand new to this forum. I have a MX5100 and placed a 5 foot grapple on it with a Farmi winch on the rear. It will do a incredible amount of work in clearing and cleaning up the woods. Mine is used for commercial logging and scrap metal. I purchased mine from Attachment Distributors. I went with 3/8 steel 650lbs. 1/2 inch steel construction is very heavy on your frontend. I'm also running a Salsco Chipper. It will grind 6-7 inch wood without a hiccup. Please read my post on skidsteer.com hopefully it will save you some aggravation and you do get what you pay for.
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #32  
Joystick thumbswitch (electric over hydraulic) is hard plumbed to rear remotes. I have been using the rear remotes for my hydraulic top link, to which I am addicted...I use it to trim my rotary cutter, disk, planter, box scraper etc... so I envision using the thumbswitch for the grapple function if connected via the rear remotes, or to keep using the top link out of the rear remotes and a diverter to control hard plumbed third function out the loader arms...does that make sense??
 
/ Grapple up, now or later? #33  
Spoke to the dealer today. A third function, installed would run about $900 and isn't a standard option for the MX5100. Said it could still be done, but still recommended that I wait until the grapple becomes a reality, then run lines from the rear remote to the front... Maybe $300... it "won't be as pretty, but it will save a lot and most people don't end up using them too much." If I were using it regularly, he thought it would be a good idea.

I'm sure there are other opinions here on what would be best for my situtation. However, I have a lot of respect for a dealer that will give advice that earns him less money.

Thanks to all for their advice. A grapple is in the future, for sure!
If you wait to get it you will surely appreciate it more. :wink:
 
 

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