work photos

   / work photos #1  

swick1

Platinum Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2007
Messages
860
Location
WV
Tractor
John Deere 1026R
I bought a JD 1026r this summer to help around the house and so many people I know wanted work done I started a side business. Here are photos from some of the projects I have done.

Pictures by backhoeworks - Photobucket
 
   / work photos #2  
I considered doing some side work with the backhoe until I checked on the insurance. They sure jump the price when you start doing backhoe work rather than surface type tractor work. How did you find it to be in your area?

MarkV
 
   / work photos
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Yes, it's expensive as heck. In fact, it's not worth it unless you do this as a full time job. I just have surface insurance and get all the utilities located before I do anything else. That's the benefit of not having any employees... fewer insurance claims when it's your butt on the line :) When I get enough work I plan on doing underground insurance, but that will be a few more months.
 
   / work photos #5  
Thanks for the photo link...
 
   / work photos #6  
Cool pictures! I came real close to buying a 1026, and it's good to see somebody putting one to work on some serious projects. It's a real capable little tractor.

So, have any tricks/experience to share regarding land clearing and site prep with a small tractor?
 
   / work photos
  • Thread Starter
#8  
When I quote any job, it's important for me to remember my machine's limitations. To get a job, it has to be small enough that a larger machine either can't fit or the customer wouldn't have enough work to keep it busy for at least 4 hours. Some jobs are easier to do with laborers by hand, but it will usually take longer and cost the same amount. The only jobs that hand work beats the tractor for are extreme grades and tight spots. If I can find the sweet spot between larger equipment and doing it by hand, it's easy to get the job. I really hype up the low damage to yards feature of this tractor and I have worked on top of plywood sheets before. My machine can also cross waste leech fields that other wheeled equipment can't touch. I have got a few jobs just spreading gravel over sensitive areas.

The most important thing to make a small tractor earn its keep is to work smart. I try to handle dirt only once. I will buy attachments for some jobs to make it easier. I have a laser grading system so i can hog out as much material as fast as possible without going under the grade i'm shooting for. This is probably the best thing I've bought in terms of speeding productivity.

I have built pallet forks and a ripper for the backhoe. I own a grader blade and have rented a box blade. I'm currently making a toothbar with more teeth than you would regularly find and sized appropriately for my tractor. I think the abundance of teeth and the tooth angles I have chosen will make it slide through the ground much easier than the toothbars I have seen.

I have a 12" bucket for the backhoe and a mechanical thumb. I have grabbed a 6x6 cut down to about 3' between the thumb and bucket to use for backfilling where I can't get the loader perpendicular to the trench or have no room to maneuver. This is where an excavator would really shine, but I make due with my big stick :) I got the idea from this video: BobcatNinja2124's Channel - YouTube

As far as land clearing is concerned, I use a combination of the bucket, backhoe, and pallet forks to work fast. For the pictures I had in the album, the whole area was briars, tree limbs and bushes. I first pushed out or dug with the backhoe a few large bushes and had my helper ride a pallet to cut off the tree branches that were hitting my face. The property owner had already ripped out a few bushes and cut down some saplings with a chainsaw, so I just put on the regular bucket and started ripping out the briars and rolling everything into a big ball. Rolling the ball released most of the dirt i had dug up with the bushes. Once I got the ball compacted, I switched to pallet forks and picked it up to go to the burn pile. As you can see from the pictures it's as big as the tractor! After a few more big balls of trash I used the backhoe / thumb combo to move some bushes and logs that I couldn't get the forks to pick up because they were a weird shape. Quick attach on the FEL is the only way to make money in that game. I then back dragged with the loader to smooth out the dirt that was left. It took about an hour and a half to clear out an area bordering the creek that was 20' by 75'. I spent most of this time trying to untangle and skid out the big 2.5' log that's longer than the tractor.

I am saving my pennies and scrap metal to build a grapple. I did about a day's worth of manual labor which in these parts would be $80 for $75. If I weren't already on the job site it wouldn't have been worth it to hire me, but he was happy that it was all cleared so quickly and he didn't have to supervise.

For removing roots with the backhoe, I found that a sawzall with a pruning blade in conjunction with the ripper provides the fastest results. I carry the sawzall with me all the time for when I find unexpected roots grading or trenching.
 
   / work photos #9  
Love the pics, this one the best.

th_instructions-1.gif

((Just kidding))

Couldn't explain how I got my 'subs' to show like they do but maybe you could copy it.
 
   / work photos
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I put up some more instructions to make it more clear. I've got to get a website going this summer! Hopefully soon I'll do some more marketing. I'm also looking into mini excavators because they are sooo much faster than the backhoe. I tried using a helper with a wheelbarrow to move the dirt i dig up with the backhoe in really cramped areas and it works okay. Overall I'd say it is faster than trying to move it with the loader later, but it's more expensive and I really need to make a bucket (or insert) that can scrape material from the edge of a trench into the bucket instead of knocking a lot of it back into the trench. The simple version would be an angled bucket insert. The complicated solution would be something like the screw on a snowblower. Any ideas? I don't want to swap between the hoe and rear scraper blade even though that would do it pretty well.
 

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