WinterDeere
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2011
- Messages
- 14,636
- Location
- Rural 'burbs, north of Philly
- Tractor
- John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
I've pulled several single ash and oak logs over 40" in diameter. Too many to count, in fact. The heaviest logs I've dragged with that winch are 7500#, with the primary limitation being anything heavier just drags my truck and trailer backwards, while the log goes nowhere.I wonder how big the largest of those ash logs is? I have my eye on a red oak that is dropping branches into my elderly neighbor’s field, it looks to be about 36” in diameter at chest height.
Point being, neither the winch stand nor the winch itself are the limit in what I can drag. Also, the payload capacity of my trailer is only about 5000#, so I end up cutting a lot of the larger oak logs shorter than trailer length, just to stay under payload. My usual cut length is 15 feet, but that only allows up to 31 inches diameter in fresh oak at 63 lb/ft3, so the 36" and 40" sticks get lopped to 9 - 11 feet, once I've dragged them near enough the trailer for convenient processing.
The biggest problem with a single 5000# log, in a trailer that's only 2000# curb weight, is securing it so that it doesn't roll. I come down some pretty steep and winding narrow roads, with big drop-offs either side, and always worry a log rolling in the bed could swing the trailer right off the edge of the road. So I jam smaller stuff under either side and strap it down as best I can.