TxDon - are you still happy with your
grapple? I'm leaning towards one like yours for my tractor. I talked to Sam at The Rake Shop a week or so ago and got a price for one. I am a little concerned with the weight though. Sam did tell me that for my tractor they would go with a 60", 8 teeth, 3/4" thick. Mine should be a little lighter than yours, but still somewhere around 600 pounds.
I do have a dumb question about it though - do you use the "wedges" where the tines meet the frame to pull up stuff or do you just rely on the digging action of the rake?THANKS!
Mostly I just rely on the digging but if the tines do not get it, the second offense attack is the wedge. On the smaller brush I found the rake will rake past and the sometimes not get caught in the wedge. This is the only time I wish for a lower cross bar. However 90% of the time I use the long teeth for effortless deep easy digging under the root ball. If I come across an area with small brush I always have my ratchet rake I can put on my bucket.
The brush and wood does not weigh that much and the curvature of the bottom tines allows the bucket to rest on the ground and tilt back and use leverage while driving forward. My neighbor was wanting to buy a 30 hp tractor and a
grapple to clear his brush. He came by to watch me work it on large Yaupon (20 feet tall and with a root ball of over 2' in diameter) and he decided that he would need a heavier tractor for more forceful digging when he saw my rear tires in the air. I have never felt tipsy while carrying a large load - only deep digging under a large root ball.
I had a 12" cedar tree 30' tall and my tractor could not push it over so I worked the
grapple around the tree popping the roots and after 5 minutes could push the tree over. I grabbed the tree by the rood ball and drug it over to the brush pile and then grabbed it in the middle and set it on top of the pile.
I would not recommend a
grapple for clearing a large area (5 acres) with big dense brush - a bulldozer with a good operator would be best. I use the
grapple for clearing trails around the fence line and small areas. We had thousands of trees die several yeas ago and now they are falling on trails and fence lines and the yaupons are crowding trails. With the
grapple I feel it rounds out my arsenal of tools available to do the least amount of hand work.
Everyone seems to think the weight of the
grapple is important. I do not. A few hundred pounds will not affect how much brush you can carry. brush is light. I think the 3/4" tines are plenty thick enough but I would get the extra bottom tine to reduce the distance between the tines to 6 1/2". Large trees are heavy but most likely you will be dragging them anyways unless you have a 30' opening.
The only modification I have had to do is to notch out the cylinder protective cover so my grease gun would fit without taking off the cover.