woody
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2010
- Messages
- 1,094
- Location
- Central Alabama
- Tractor
- Kubota B26, Kubota ZG222, Kubota L45, 1980 Ford 1700
I have used old fork stock to make tooling that needed to be very tough. It sounds like the forks are made out of annealed 4140 or 4340.They would bend far too easily if they were regular low carbon steel.
When I built the frame for my forks, I incorporated a 2" receiver into it. Just have to slide the forks off, slide a hitch in and it works great. I've since seen a couple of commercially available fork frames that have that feature.I bought a SSQA receiver hitch. Very strong and safe. When using a single fork for any job you risk bending that fork, even if just a little you will kick yourself every time you use it later.
There are single and double clamp on ball hitches for forklifts that require no drilling too.
That sounds well planned but at my age sliding forks off the lift is too much for my back. Fortunately I have a SS which is almost ideal for moving a trailer.When I built the frame for my forks, I incorporated a 2" receiver into it. Just have to slide the forks off, slide a hitch in and it works great. I've since seen a couple of commercially available fork frames that have that feature.
Makes sense.That sounds well planned but at my age sliding forks off the lift is too much for my back. Fortunately I have a SS which is almost ideal for moving a trailer.
Most of them are LC steel but the forks themselves are heat treated and tempered. Steel is expensive today and proper heat treating can make a 'silk purse' out of a 'sows ear' and it's much less expensive to heat treat after fabrication anyway.They would bend far too easily if they were regular low carbon steel.
Here a used set cost just as much as a new set from express steel.Yeah, I am going to look for a set of used forks and one of them I will drill a hole in.