I have the SGC1060 on my LX2610. It is a very sturdy grapple. I use it to move rocks and stumps, clear brush, and haul logs. It has teeth on the bottom that are very good for pulling out roots and stones. I think the SSQA on the tractor would give out before I would do any harm to the grapple unit.Thoughts on landpride SGC 1060, anyone have any experience with these or heard much about them.. can’t wait on EA 55”….. looks like built pretty good just haven’t seen much on performance of them other than utube
Landpride makes good equipment. I have too many pieces to mention but most of my stuff is now LP. Can’t go wrong with it and chances are your Kubota/Landpride dealer is closer than any other equipment dealer if you need to resolve an issue.…nope, I’m not employed by either.Thoughts on landpride SGC 1060, anyone have any experience with these or heard much about them.. can’t wait on EA 55”….. looks like built pretty good just haven’t seen much on performance of them other than utube
I've had my Wickeder 55 since October this year, so I'm no grapple expert, but have put 15 hours or so on it since it arrived. I like the serrated teeth as they will really dig/cut through any tree roots I'm trying to get out of the ground. Once you have the grappled bottom teeth under a tree root (1" - 2" diameter is what I've done before), you can curl the grapple a couple times and they teeth will basically chew/pull through the roots. I've not had any issues with debris getting stuck on the serrated teeth of the upper or lower sections of teeth.Do serrated teeth help, or is it just something that looks cool (they definitely do)?
I have the Land Pride 55 inch on the 2601, and it is impressive,, just remember if you dont bend a tooth on it you aint using it
You need a bigger hammer!<noticed a bent tooth today>
Apparently, I'm now using mine. (-;
They don't bend back easily either!
You should just come on and say "I don't like EA because I have to pay them for their product and wait for it to be delivered" instead of some really obvious back handed strawman argument.I have wondered whether serrated teeth are a plus. My grapple does not have them, and it seems to do fine with curvature and pressure in terms of holding things (logs, branches, loose materials and etc.), and the lack of serrations aids in a clean dump/release of loose materials, vines, small branches and etc. I have noticed on some internet videos small amounts of debris being caught in the serrations after the dump/release. On the other hand, it would seem that serrations could be a plus in preventing large items (a tree trunk with some remaining limbs protruding from the grapple) from rotating during transit.
Do serrated teeth help, or is it just something that looks cool (they definitely do)?