New dozer and land clearing

/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#41  
Starting to lean.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#42  
On its way.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#43  
Get under the root ball to loosen things up.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#44  
To give you a size reference, I'm 6'3. Now it's time to cut out the firewood, move things around, and fill in the crater. If you notice all the dirt piles in the back, I'm taking a deep cut to get all the roots out from the brush. After lots of work with the rake I'll have plenty of dirt moving to do. So far I'm at about 95 hours on the meter and it's only been 1 month since starting. More as things happen.

Thanks for looking
Thomas
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #45  
Great action pics. Keep up the good work and be careful.
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #46  
Nice job Thomas! It looks like you are having fun and getting a lot accomplished. That little Case dozer is ideal for that kind of work. Because oak trees seem to have roots concentrated in a ball around the base, I try to be careful about digging out brush and small trees near the base of oak trees. If I can't push them out, I'll cut them with a chainsaw. I'm afraid to dig them out and maybe damage the roots of nearby nice oaks. Postoaks don't like to be disturbed. I've lost a few due to being overzealous around their root ball. /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #47  
Tom,

Sure looks like your having fun! /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

There were some posts on here at one time about some people getting hurt pushing over trees with a dozer because the root ball got under the blade. When this happens, it can flip up the dozer and cause all sorts of damage.

It's just one of those things I'm always cautious about.

Thanks for sharing with us,
Eddie
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #48  
Sandy loam makes it nice digging out trees. I you ever have one like the last one that still will not come out after you dig around it. Take all of the dug dirt and make a ramp . Then drive you and push the tree higher on the trunk. Just dont drive off the ramp into the hole. When you cut the roots you can make the ramp at the same time.
Keep up the good work. I is time for me to get mine out and start again.
I know this was covered before. After I work burn piles I alway check the belley pan good before I leave the dozer. There can be a hot coal that might take a while to get a fire going in that mess that is always down there. After you fuel up and grease up climb up and use your nose to smell in the engine hood. Make sure you have the tools in you box to pull the cover off in case of fire. That way you can toss dirt on the fire. Just my 2cents.
John
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #49  
John,

Good point about working around burn piles.

I keep a large fire extinguisher behind my seat in my dozer.

I'm always worried that a hose will bust while I'm punching up a fire and the oil will catch on fire. It's one of those scenerios that's never happened, but I'm still paranoid about it.

Putting out a fire on my dozer before it gets out of control and to minimize the damage is a huge concern. A fire extinguisher is cheap insurance.

Eddie
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #50  
Mornin Tom,
#1 Your havin way too much fun /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

#2 Dont know how much firewood you need down there but it looks like you got plenty /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

scotty
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #51  
I'll second what Eddie said about being careful when pushing over one that had a bigger root ball. I was pushing some out with an old JD 350 dozer that I had and was pushing a Beech Tree. I had dug all around it about 6 ft out and maybe 3 ft deep. I figured it would go if I could get as high as possible so I pushed some dirt back on one side to make a ramp of sorts and got on the ramp an pushed as highj as the blade would go. It was a hard push and when it started I kept pushing to make sure it was going. It went, and the rootball caught under the blade and picked the front of the dozer 4 ft off the ground. It took me an hour of twisting, turning, cussing and nearly messing my pants a couple of times before I got it off. The whole point of this story is backoff, if it doesn't go do something different, it'll probably save some time in the long run.
Another thing I've done is pull up close to the burn pile and raise the blade as high as it will go and kick it in neutral, and rev it up to let the fan blow on the fire to get it good and hot to stay burning. That rad. fan will put out a lot of air, but it gets warm and smokey on the operater. Later, Nat
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #52  
So you're going along destroying brush with a dozer fan that pushes air through the radiator. Over time lot's of leaves and junk get blown into the radiator which acts as a filter. So now those leaves get hot and dry since they are against the radiator and maybe sprayed with oil since they are getting engine air.

Then you pull up to your fire and push the coals together making lots of smoke and big flames. It only takes one little spark to set on that bed of dried leaves to start it on fire. The fan blows on the little ember to get it good and hot. The first thing you notice is a little smoke whisping out of the grille. You think "Oh poo" shut down the tractor and then the smoke stops but then it starts again and you're smart enough to know what happened. You start thinking about how to put the fire out that is in front of the fan, but behind the fan shroud.

You've got three choices 1) just start dousing everything with your fire extinguisher but you're too cheap and the fire is just a smolder right now buried in the cooler, hard to get at with a spray, better save that FE for if you need it. 2) Spit beer on the fire from the front of the grille, this usually works but what if you've drunk your last beer? 3) Time to pee through the grille and enjoy the aroma of smoldering leaves and urine.

I've been there before. Add to that that the tractor and you are covered in black ash that the fan kicked up. Keep a clean radiator, after the smolder incident I removed the radiator to clean it which added a ton more airflow.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #53  
Eddie I too always have an extinguisher on board. The d6c I had a few years back had no engine enclosures. I cleared allot of land with it. When punching up piles the fan would pull small coals in the engine compartment. Those little leaves would catch sometimes. A little dirt and it was out.
Whenever I buy a dozer I pull the pans to get all of the oil-covered dirt and stuff out. I also check for dirt build up on the engine anywhere. That will show where there is a fuel or oil leak.
It sure is fun running a dozer though.
John
 
/ New dozer and land clearing #54  
This is just a great post. I'm in the process of clearing 70 acres of 5 year old clear-cut East Texas thickets with a Case 450C dozer. Reading the experiences here really makes me feel better about what I'm doing...and also the need for adding a fire extinguisher. Thanks.
 
/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#55  
Thanks for all the comments. So far, this has been the biggest rootball to come up. I've known about the possibility of getting caught so I back up once I see it start moving good. Also, with my sandy soil, most everything I push out doesn't bring up much.

Since this machine had a new engine when we got it the pans had been off and cleaned. I do check it periodically but I still have to get a toolbox to mount behind the seat to carry things.

We are getting a second fire extinguisher especially after my neighbors 850 unexplainably caught fire at the engine. So far the claim is nearing $10,000.

Thomas

This is a pic of my neighbor showing the ultimate in getting a pile to burn.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #56  
A fire extinguisher is great but sometimes hang around a bit longer if you are working around burn piles or have some leaks. A friend of mine has this Cat 928 (or 924 or something). Tires are about 6' tall. He was working it, left it and about 2 hours later returned to see a fire going. The fire hadn't been going for that long but it was to big for a fire extinguisher. He figured it started less than 30 miutes before he came back, so 90 minutes before it started. This thing is great for clearing before or after the loggers came in. You can see the teeth on the bottom of the blade. 3-4 passes and it would cut a 30" red oak stump flush with the ground. He also has a straight blade for it. But not anymore...next post.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #57  
Less than a month later from the previous picture this is what he's left with. I think he said the tires are 6k a piece. Being a former mechanic the damage didn't look "to" severe but cat wanted something like 50k to repair it. Damage mostly to the drivers compartment and engine mid area. Lower hydraulics are still clean. Sad. He replaced it with a D6. Nice thing about the rubber tires it could run 20-25mph down the county road.
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #58  
last one..
 

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/ New dozer and land clearing #59  
That blade looks like the Rome KG blade I have that I used on my D6C.
John
 
/ New dozer and land clearing
  • Thread Starter
#60  
Thanks for those. It's always good to be reminded of what could happen.

The last picture I posted was definitely not what I meant to attach. Here's the correct one.

Thomas
 

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