IslandTractor
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2005
- Messages
- 15,802
- Location
- Prudence Island, RI
- Tractor
- 2007 Kioti DK40se HST, Woods BH
1) 72" grapples are heavier which means lower net lift capacityPlease entertain me by telling me why the physics I used when I chose a 72" grapple for the majority of use on my DK is wrong? Grapples just like tractor options, attachments and HP are all relative to both the person using them as well as the jobs that user is going to do with them and the one theory (just like yours on HP) isn't the correct one for everybody.
2) 72" grapples distribute digging force over a wider area than 48 or 60 so digging power is reduced
3) Digging stumps requires only a narrow area of sod to be disturbed but a 72" grapple is far wider than necessary or desirable for any stump (note that even massive excavators use only 36-48" grapples).
4) 72 and even 60" grapples are less effective at pulling up roots because you either need to use the outside tine to hook under the root (which decenters the load and twists the FEL) or you need to dig three feet on either side of the target root in order to hook it.
5) 72" open bottom grapple requires two lids which increases weight, cost and complexity.
6) more difficult to maneuver in woods or near bushes etc
7) wide loads do not require a wide grapple. The human hand is a good example. You can pick up an eight foot 2x4 with a single hand. You can grapple and lift a bigger tree with a narrow lighter grapple.
8) Narrow grapples behave like the prow of a ship when driving into thick brush. They create a wedge that the tractor can drive through so no need to have grapple the same width as tractor.
9) the real benefit of wider grapples is primarily seen in construction where skidsteers can clean up a wider swath of ground debris with a single pass on a job site. Not generally a task that CUTs are used for.
10) narrow grapples don't have overhangs outside the arms of the FEL which lessens risk of torquing FEL arms when running into a solid object.
Did I already mention that wider grapples are far heavier and much more expensive and take up more storage space than narrower grapples that do the same job?
Nowhere is it written that a grapple should be as wide as a standard bucket. Buckets are sized largely on the ability of the loader to lift a full standard bucket of dirt. Grapples have different uses but almost none of those uses benefits from more width. Again, check out huge excavators that could technically manage a ten foot grapple...they use 3 foot grapples.
The issue with grapple buying is that most people have either never operated a grapple before buying for their CUT or have experience only with skidsteers which all have six foot grapples. Dealers generally aren't much help and tend to sell whatever the novice CUT customers believe they need which naturally but incorrectly is to match their standard bucket width.
Think through the physics and tell us why you believe wider is better.