Hi Anthony
The pit in the photos is the James Dick pit just south of Caledon Village at the top of the Niagara Escarpment and it is still a working pit. The main crusher plant and all the stockpiles are well away from the area I was working in so I could pick through the rocks at my leisure without and heavy equipment zipping by.
Glad to hear you had a full house for the weekend. It was fabulous weather at my place too but I spent the whole weekend moving dirt. The first and second levels are virtually complete and I hope to finish levels 3 and four by the weekend and then I can finally start placing the boulders.
Hi Martian
You are correct about the forks being hydraulically operated. They are from a company called Horst and they are rated for 4,500 pounds and cost me around $2,000 CDN. I got so fed up with having to get off the machine and manually adjust the forks that I actually purchased these a year ago when I still had my B26. It is really nice to just be able to adjust the width with the push of a button.
I have also found they are great with rocks since everyone is a different shape and size and requires many adjustments of the forks. The other nice thing is when you set a rock down you can just open the forks and back away and the rock will usually stay put. I find this much beter then angling the forks and hoping the rock will fall off facing the way you want because invariably the rock winds up in a different position and then you have to reposition it.
I haven't had any problems with mine and I was moving some very large rocks last Friday with the L45. A number of them I could not lift but managed to push them up a high pile of dirt, get the forks under them and then drove the boulder to my trailer and put it in.
If you are dealing with a lot of irregularly shaped lifts, I highly recommend a set of hydraulic forks.
Lauren
The pit in the photos is the James Dick pit just south of Caledon Village at the top of the Niagara Escarpment and it is still a working pit. The main crusher plant and all the stockpiles are well away from the area I was working in so I could pick through the rocks at my leisure without and heavy equipment zipping by.
Glad to hear you had a full house for the weekend. It was fabulous weather at my place too but I spent the whole weekend moving dirt. The first and second levels are virtually complete and I hope to finish levels 3 and four by the weekend and then I can finally start placing the boulders.
Hi Martian
You are correct about the forks being hydraulically operated. They are from a company called Horst and they are rated for 4,500 pounds and cost me around $2,000 CDN. I got so fed up with having to get off the machine and manually adjust the forks that I actually purchased these a year ago when I still had my B26. It is really nice to just be able to adjust the width with the push of a button.
I have also found they are great with rocks since everyone is a different shape and size and requires many adjustments of the forks. The other nice thing is when you set a rock down you can just open the forks and back away and the rock will usually stay put. I find this much beter then angling the forks and hoping the rock will fall off facing the way you want because invariably the rock winds up in a different position and then you have to reposition it.
I haven't had any problems with mine and I was moving some very large rocks last Friday with the L45. A number of them I could not lift but managed to push them up a high pile of dirt, get the forks under them and then drove the boulder to my trailer and put it in.
If you are dealing with a lot of irregularly shaped lifts, I highly recommend a set of hydraulic forks.
Lauren