JOHNTHOMAS
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2008
- Messages
- 7,717
- Location
- Somerset, Ky
- Tractor
- F2690 4WD RTV X1140 MX5400 HST ZD1211
BET THAT WOULD BE A CHEAP PURCHASE FOR THE RARE SNOW DAYS WE HAVE HERE.My Cat 246 was a tire machine and it was not very good in the snow or mud. I bought a Loegering undercarriage with 18" tracks....it's a animal now.
GUESS THAT'S WHY MY ONE FRONT TIRE ISN'T TOUCHING THE GROUNDYa got to be very carefull with a SS. They have a ridgid frame (no suspension or axle movement) and unless it is on flat ground (not necessary level), you have only one wheel on each side firmly on the ground diagonal from each other, and 2 wheels "light" if not touching the ground at all. Imagine putting a 4 legged table down with one leg on the carpet with the others on the wood floor. That equals 2 wheel drive. Chain it up on all 4 corners. IIRC you just got this machine, you will come to know how to use it.:thumbsup:
ACTUALLY HAVE A WINCH I BOUGHT SEVERAL YEARS AGO TO MOUNT ON MY RTV1140......IT'S SOMEWHERE IN THE GARAGE.
SAW THIS ONCE ON A YOU TUBE VIDEO AND LOOKED COOL BUT DON'T THINK MY RM HAS HOLES.Are there holes in the rims that you can run a bolt through? If so, you could bolt a single chain holding a 2 X 2 piece of scrap steel or lumber. I once chained a small wood fence post to my tractor tire and it got me out of the divot I had made. Just be really careful and stop after 25 % of one revolution of the spinning wheel.
THANKS. :thumbsup:Purchase larger diameter winter tires and wheels for your SS.
ANOTHER CHEAP SOLUTION FOR THAT ONE TENTH OF 1% USAGE TIME USING MY HOME LANDSCAPING SS.MAY LOOK AT WINTER TIRES WHEN TIRES WEAR OUT, WELL I'm 68 AND I USUALLY DO 50 HOURS A YEAR OR LESS ON MY Kubota TRACTORS AND MOST JOBS ARE DONE......
ALREADY FOUND OUT THIS SS IS NOT USABLE IN WET/MUD GROUND, TIRES LOAD UP QUICK AND BAD AND BECOMES LIKE BALOON TIRES.I learned the hard way, only in mud. Wheels did have some openings so I threaded a heavy 1/2"nylon rope through and around as much as I could. I then found a 6' length of old chain link fence and jammed it under the rear tires ( I was stuck nose down is a mud bog). I got just enough traction to get up on the chain link and out I went. Try some old fencing.
Now as to a final solution some of the track sets do work, but a contractor friend had issue with jumping out of them. He did finally find one that worked, but I do not know the brand - they have a heavy center track the tires rid in and tensioners that can snug things up. He drives the heck out of his equipment, so I would not judge his luck against the norm. Otherwise there are a lot of chain sets out there, some very aggressive with big studs.. Check out Quality Chain.
I doubt that would be enough sole. Depending on how much he is buried and how big of a SS he has. If you had a second operator to operate the skid steer and the chain hoist it would probably work.
Edit. This SS only weighs about 4,000 pounds. A 5 ton chain hoist should be able to pull it out. Without spending any money him and an assistant should be able to pull it out with his truck.
WIFE IS A GREAT ASSISTANT, SOME TIMES, AND SHE KEPT DOING CHAIN REMOVAL/MOVING YESTERDAY AND I COULDN'T GET MY COME ALONG TO UNWIND BUT IF RTV1140 WOULDN'T EVEN SLIGHTLY MOVE IT DOUBT I'D OF HAD ENOUGH STRENGTH TO MAKE THE COMEALONG HAVE ANY IMPACT.
I really do appreciate everyone's input. Strong wind last night and 45 degrees and supposed to be rain and 45 degrees today so snow will go and not be a part of my problem. I have some gravel, no sand, and with Truck being able to get closer in front of SS so one chain will work and wife driving truck and doing some removal of mud buildup between front and back tires I believe I'll get it out. Also one side has snow piled up 4' to 5' preventing any movement that direction for swinging/rocking/bouncing but that to will be gone. Had 3 hours on it when I got stuck and probably have 5 on it now.