My Bucket Hooks

/ My Bucket Hooks #2  
Those welds may not be the greatest, but the hooks aren't going anywhere. I'm sure they will last a lifetime with no problems because you got good penetration.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #3  
Bigboyskioti said:
ere are the pics of my Hooks. I welded one on each side. I had to put some 3/16 plate under them to get em to sit the way I wanted.... again don't make fun of my welding. It's all a hobby for me. And I have never had one break. These hooks have picked up a locust tree that was around 14" round X 25 ' long.
QUOTE]



BigBoy

What type of welder did you use ? looks like Mig Flux ?
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #4  
Doesn't have to look pretty to hold...good idea extra plate for strenght.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #5  
Not to be critical, but you do know that for the same price they make weld on hooks that are easier to weld than pin on hooks that are made to be pinned on another chain link.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks
  • Thread Starter
#6  
The welder that was used for those was a 110V arc. it was my first welder, bought about 13 years ago. I now have a Hobart that is way easier to use! Like going from a Yugo to a Caddy!
I had the hooks so they weren't the same price.....
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #7  
Now Dargo he may have had them hooks just laying around doin nothing and all it cost was welding rod and electricity..;)

Looks like they will last along time.

Looks like I posted a hair late:(
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #8  
Okay, I wasted $8 for my pair of weld on grab hooks. ;)
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #10  
My local farm co-op store has a huge bin of them, and that's where I got mine. Many guys here get theirs from A&W or AW Towing, or something like that. I really didn't intend to be mean or over critical in the first post; just saying that there is an item made for the application and a guy doesn't have to try to adapt a hook made for another application to one for which it wasn't designed.

The other thing that is very important when you weld on hooks is not only to make sure you have a good heavy base, as the OP did, but to only weld them on inline with your loader arms or in the center of your bucket. I've seen many guys weld hooks on right on the outer edges of the bucket. Doing so will assure loader damage if you ever pull on something really hard or lift something really heavy. I know several dealers in my area since I've bought several tractors over the years, and they will void your warranty of you jack your loader out of shape and have a problem because you welded hooks on the outer edges of the bucket and caused undue forces on the loader arms.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #11  
Dargo said:
The other thing that is very important when you weld on hooks is not only to make sure you have a good heavy base, as the OP did, but to only weld them on inline with your loader arms or in the center of your bucket. I've seen many guys weld hooks on right on the outer edges of the bucket. Doing so will assure loader damage if you ever pull on something really hard or lift something really heavy. I know several dealers in my area since I've bought several tractors over the years, and they will void your warranty of you jack your loader out of shape and have a problem because you welded hooks on the outer edges of the bucket and caused undue forces on the loader arms.

Huh, wonder if that is what happened to the loader on my b7100. It is definitely a bit out of tweak and sure enough the bucket hooks are welded to the outside. These are pin on hooks so it was probably easiest to weld them out there on the flat side of the bucket.

Thanks!
Charles
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #12  
Uh, I'm not going to tell you how I know that about where not to put hooks. :eek: Fortunately the Kubota dealer "fudged", as he called it, and still honored the warranty on an issue.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #13  
Dargo thank you for the information. I was just going to buy flat hooks and weld them on to the outside of the buckets. The best experience you get is from making mistakes thank you for sharing your experience with us so that I dont have to make those same mistakes.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #15  
gemini5362 said:
The best experience you get is from making mistakes...

Uh, yup, that would be me. :eek: :)
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #16  
I ordered some of the 70 series from AW direct. I checked on the net and from the several I looked at they were the cheapest.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #17  
ordered my hooks yesterday morning around 6am came home from work and they were here (aw direct 3/8 hooks) now if only the tractor was here!
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #18  
Inspector507 said:
I think these are the ones Dargo was referring to from AW Direct. They also have them in Grade 70 here.

Those are the same as I had welded onto my FEL. I only had the 5/16" size welded on...thats more than sufficient for anything IM doing
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #19  
Dargo said:
My local farm co-op store has a huge bin of them, and that's where I got mine. Many guys here get theirs from A&W or AW Towing, or something like that. I really didn't intend to be mean or over critical in the first post; just saying that there is an item made for the application and a guy doesn't have to try to adapt a hook made for another application to one for which it wasn't designed.

The other thing that is very important when you weld on hooks is not only to make sure you have a good heavy base, as the OP did, but to only weld them on inline with your loader arms or in the center of your bucket. I've seen many guys weld hooks on right on the outer edges of the bucket. Doing so will assure loader damage if you ever pull on something really hard or lift something really heavy. I know several dealers in my area since I've bought several tractors over the years, and they will void your warranty of you jack your loader out of shape and have a problem because you welded hooks on the outer edges of the bucket and caused undue forces on the loader arms.

I welded mine right on the outside and no problems. Course, I don't chain a 6,000 # log to just one hook and back away either. I could bend a loader with the hooks in line as quick as I could mine. Another option is a piece of 3 3/8" plate 3" x 3" or so with a notch 7/16" wide x 1" cut in it welded on the end of the bucket so that the notch is a bit above the top of the bucket and facing the tractor. 3/8" chain will hook in there quite well.
 
/ My Bucket Hooks #20  
I have a question. I was not thinking and ordered 3/8 inch hooks. Most of my chains are 5/16. I noticed that some of the hooks I looked at said 5/16 or 3/8. Will the 3/8 hooks hold my 5/16 chain OK.
 

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