What did you do to or on your Kubota today?

In Utopia

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L175 FEL
Apr 21, 2013
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That does sound crazy. Was taught in A&P school that at least two or three threads need to come through the nut for proper torque. Who's right?
Paging runs with scissors!
Common sense says who ever taught you that was wrong.........think about it.
Really think the threads hanging out and don't have any contact with a "female" thread have anything to do with stretching?
 
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woodman55

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L6060HSTC, RTV 1100
May 15, 2022
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I cheated a bit today and used the grapple for the heavy lifting and the splitter. I made a decent dent in the pile though. 🥃
I had a few big pieces like that this spring. I considered trying to get onto the splitter, but then just got the sledge and wedge. They were straight grained so split remarkable easy. I only did a few at a time as not to pull a muscle, and just split them enough so I could get them on the splitter by hand.
 
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Russell King

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L185F, Modern Ag Competitor 4’ shredder, Rhino tiller, rear dirt scoop
Jun 17, 2012
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Common sense says who ever taught you that was wrong.........think about it.
Really think the threads hanging out and don't have any contact with a "female" thread have anything to do with stretching?
Those threads hanging out help the strength of a bolted joint by reducing the stress concentration factors in the bolt and nut. Those are due to the first couple of threads on the bolt not being 100% full good threads so by getting the bolt to stick out then there is better thread contact through the entire nut.

that is what @lynnmor was showing in his post above

This has just become the industry standard and is taught extensively.

 

rc51stierhoff

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B2650, MX6000, Ford 8N, (BX sold)
Sep 13, 2021
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I had a few big pieces like that this spring. I considered trying to get onto the splitter, but then just got the sledge and wedge. They were straight grained so split remarkable easy. I only did a few at a time as not to pull a muscle, and just split them enough so I could get them on the splitter by hand.
My preference is using a maul too. Personally I don’t like using logs that big for firewood, but it was a tree in a place I could not get equipment too easily, so I chunked it up and hauled out with the grapple and made a pile. It was big enough pile not much fun to wrestle em out to split, so I cheated 🙊. I don’t want it to go to waste either…it’s a shame to use that type of wood for firewood. My splitter can be set up to split vertically, but for big pieces that seems like more work to wrestle them in under the wedge. The grapple really helped to set up up on the table top then pretty easy to roll onto the splitter.
 
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PHPaul

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www.eastovershoe.com
We've been contemplating getting out of the layer hen habit for a while now. Finally re-homed the last of the hens to my daughter's coop Saturday and have been tearing out the chicken pen.

Combination of chain link and page wire, SEVERELY overgrown with wild rose, wild raspberries, goldenrod and alder sprouts. Managed to salvage about 2/3 of the chain link which will be used to expand the daughter's pen, the rest I just hooked onto with a chain and ripped out. Pulled the posts and mowed the weeds/brush, now I'm down to cleaning up my mess, lugging off rotten cedar posts and mangled wire and such.
 

In Utopia

Active member

Equipment
L175 FEL
Apr 21, 2013
603
103
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Utopia,Tx/Pasadena,TX
Those threads hanging out help the strength of a bolted joint by reducing the stress concentration factors in the bolt and nut. Those are due to the first couple of threads on the bolt not being 100% full good threads so by getting the bolt to stick out then there is better thread contact through the entire nut.

that is what @lynnmor was showing in his post above

This has just become the industry standard and is taught extensively.

Isn't that like saying if you take a rope, cut off one end, put it on the the other end the rope will be longer?