I have been contemplating filling a 55-gallon drum with cement and whatever scrap metal I have on hand and calling it good. I'm not sure how often I would need the weight when I wouldn't already have an implement on the rear, and the ability to hang extra weights off of my box-blade and/or off of the front if I don't have the loader on might be a plus.
I have about 350-400 pounds of lead window weights and another 180 pounds of rusty worn out tire chains. Lumping them into 50 # chunks so I could easily lift them on and off and fabricating a bracket to hang these bundles off of the BB or the grill guard seems like it might be worth a shot. (Basically make them into poor man's suitcase weights?). I'm an abysmal welder, but this might be a good chance to learn/improve (realize I can't weld lead, but maybe make some boxes and or use some of the brake drums/rotors/bent steel rims scattered around the place):
I've never had a tractor where the loader came off (easily), so I don't even know if I'd want to hang them off the front. If I'm moving dirt/gravel there's normally a blade on the back. I don't know how much I'd use a "carry all" and like the looks/expense/effort/durability of the wooden ones I've seen in videos but the ability to put some weight low and close to the tractor would be a plus. I don't really know how much weight I need, but if I have a combination of cement and steel I'd rather have the steel lower (but easy to take on and off?
OK, let's hear some design ideas!
Thanks,
Bob
I have about 350-400 pounds of lead window weights and another 180 pounds of rusty worn out tire chains. Lumping them into 50 # chunks so I could easily lift them on and off and fabricating a bracket to hang these bundles off of the BB or the grill guard seems like it might be worth a shot. (Basically make them into poor man's suitcase weights?). I'm an abysmal welder, but this might be a good chance to learn/improve (realize I can't weld lead, but maybe make some boxes and or use some of the brake drums/rotors/bent steel rims scattered around the place):
I've never had a tractor where the loader came off (easily), so I don't even know if I'd want to hang them off the front. If I'm moving dirt/gravel there's normally a blade on the back. I don't know how much I'd use a "carry all" and like the looks/expense/effort/durability of the wooden ones I've seen in videos but the ability to put some weight low and close to the tractor would be a plus. I don't really know how much weight I need, but if I have a combination of cement and steel I'd rather have the steel lower (but easy to take on and off?
OK, let's hear some design ideas!
Thanks,
Bob