tacticalturnip
Super Member
Make me an offer. Think how jealous your neighbors will be.
With respect to your fine rock, up here in Maine we have plenty of our own.
Make me an offer. Think how jealous your neighbors will be.
Oh, sure. Try to talk the price down.With respect to your fine rock, up here in Maine we have plenty of our own.![]()
I would put it like this: I don't think anything works "well" with stumps except for heavy equipment, but this thing is infinitely better than an ordinary shovel. Stumps are a curse to all humanity.i like the look of it. does it work well?
Interesting. I was expecting more variables to be addressed. Weight, surface, tires, etc. They addressed wheel slip, but I didn't see any comparisons using different tires.Here's some Ag engineering applied to exactly this problem: TRACTOR PERFORMANCE ON SOFT SOIL - EMPIRICAL . The short-hand answer is "It depends", but weight is a key factor at slow speeds.
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This started out as a small "corner" of rock sticking out of the ground.
Dig before you try yanking it out.
(Btw, It's still in the ground)
Maybe it's coprolite. Call a few museums and tell them you're accepting cash offers.
If it is...that must have hurt the poor tyrannosaurus.Maybe it's coprolite. Call a few museums and tell them you're accepting cash offers.
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Coprolite - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
My neighbor used to pull up rocks and stumps with his pallet forks. Now one fork points down.get a pallet fork under it and pry up, roll it if you can from there. I've rolled 4,000 lb rocks with my tractor.
I would put it like this: I don't think anything works "well" with stumps except for heavy equipment, but this thing is infinitely better than an ordinary shovel. Stumps are a curse to all humanity.
I have a large rock outcrop in a pasture and have thought about using Dexpan. Look at this video. A small rock will be easier to move.Thanks for the help.
So a big come-along chained to an oak should be a lot better.
No comment without a pic of the rock and how you were pulling on the rock. Suspect you didn't know how, and my clue is in the subject line.I tried to pull a big rock out of my yard with my Kubota L3710 and got nowhere. Today it occurred to me that I should think about getting a come-along.
So how hard can a 37-horse tractor pull? I don't really know. I can get a come-along that supposedly pulls with two tons of force.
I also have a Dodge with a 5.9 Cummins. They seem to do well against farm tractors, at least on Youtube.