People Loading Stuff Wrong

   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #1  

California

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An hour north of San Francisco
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Similar to the rediculous overload thread - this vid shows a Russian log loading technique that OSHA would never allow.

Don't try this without a locking differential!

Has anyone ever seen something like this? Have pictures?

Jws1oPb.gif


(Source)
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #2  
Do you mean like this? :)

That loading looks pretty cleaver to me. We are so spoiled in this country thanks to a bunch of lawyers.
A country "Of the Lawyers, By the Lawyers and For the Lawyers".
 

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   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #3  
Similar to the rediculous overload thread - this vid shows a Russian log loading technique that OSHA would never allow.

Don't try this without a locking differential!

Has anyone ever seen something like this? Have pictures?

Jws1oPb.gif


(Source)

Other than the Swedish guy getting out of the mudhole with his tractor by chaining on a big log to the rear wheel, no.
It is innovative, several things could go wrong, but it DOES work. So it would appear. You gotta hand it to the Russkies for doing some extraordinary things with simple machines.
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #4  
Looks like a good idea to me.
Now how can I adapt it to my tractor?

There are a LOT of things which can be done safely as long as one remembers the limits.
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #5  
Interesting. I don't see how that sideboard extension survives!

It may also be interesting when it comes time to unhook the log.
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #6  
They aren't loading anything but it is bolted to the wheel like the first video.

 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #7  
They aren't loading anything but it is bolted to the wheel like the first video.

I think they look dangerous and wouldn't use one personally. They may not be any worse that other splitters, but I'll pass.

In every one of those videos I've ever seen the user is on the passenger side right by the exhaust, wouldn't you rather be on the driver side away from the fumes and closer to the kill switch?
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #8  
I think they look dangerous and wouldn't use one personally. They may not be any worse that other splitters, but I'll pass.

In every one of those videos I've ever seen the user is on the passenger side right by the exhaust, wouldn't you rather be on the driver side away from the fumes and closer to the kill switch?

I would, with the drivers side door open. I guess if you are running by yourself and you get tangled up in it, it would not matter what side you were on.
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #9  
They aren't loading anything but it is bolted to the wheel like the first video.

Those spiral splitters were commonly advertised in the 1970's. Some people swore that they were the greatest thing since sliced bread. IDK, I wouldn't get near one.

BTW, it works on the principle that with the one wheel off the ground, the rear differential transfers all the motion to that wheel and the vehicle doesn't move. If for some reason, that wheel gets stopped, I would assume the power goes to the other wheel on the ground. Remember, the parking brake can't be used...... Oh gosh, I can just envision what happens when someone sets that up on a limited slip differential......:eek: Try explaining that to your insurance company!
 
   / People Loading Stuff Wrong #10  
They aren't loading anything but it is bolted to the wheel like the first video.

My parents had something like this... they used it on their open diff '66 chevy van when they moved to the farm in the mid-'70s. Dad would chock the other 3 wheels well and split the wood perpendicular to the splitter, toward the end of the log, so one end of the log was on the ground counter-acting the twisting force of the screwsplitter.

Dad wasn't much for hard work like splitting wood. By 1980 he was designing a super-insulated house which he and friends built in '81. At the ripe old age of 4, all I did was carry off thier tools and hide them at the time but I still remember a lot of it. Dad now heats his house with 3 - 1500 watt elec space heaters, and it stays comfortable year round.
 

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