Been filling in an old pool. Should get the last 12 yards of fill in next week.
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That's an eclectic musical ensemble there, NCL, with the Ford model A/T rear axle housing for a piano stool!!View attachment 90473
Was clearing out one of the houses for all over interior paint and flooring renovation. Took the trailer mover off the 3 point, put on the box blade for ballast, and that freed up the 80” x 36” dolly occupied by the box scrape when it isn’t on the tractor so we could use it to move this pillow into storage.
Of course we also used the dolly for a few other things like moving a couple of couches and this upright piano.
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The Kubota made moving quite a few things much easier.
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Nothing moved far. Either to the house 60’ away or the drive in basement of the house it came from.
The front legs on the piano are pretty spindly so a little cribbing was in order. An old 100 ton railroad screw jack inherited from some long ago relative was just the right height run all the way down to 24”. A 2x4 spread the force and kept the jack from scarring the piano.That's an eclectic musical ensemble there, NCL, with the Ford model A/T rear axle housing for a piano stool!!
I did pretty much the same. After I serviced and mounted the snow blower on the 3pt the fel was used to back blade and trim out part of my gravel driveway.Removed the rotary cutter for the season and installed my rear blade for the winter. This gave me some initiative to grade the gravel driveway and road that had gotten beat up over the long summer rainy season.
I couldn't imagine not having a grapple now that I've used one, especially with my sawmill. It stays on the tractor 95% of the time.View attachment 90406
I got rid of some of the brush the previous owner left behind. And there's a LOT where that came from.
One of the reasons I got the grapple. Such a handy gadget when dealing with brush!
I may be outing myself as an unskilled bucket operator, but a similar bucket level indicator, which is the OEM option for mine, has greatly improved my results running the bucket. If I ran the bucket 8 hours a day 5 days a week probably wouldn’t need it but I run the grapple (can see the leading edge on it) and forks (have to stand to see them but I know the offset on the level indicator for the forks) more than the bucket, so being able to cut to the bottom of a pile of rock without digging a hole in the ground below the rock and contaminating them with dirt is actually a big deal to me. OEM for mine was only $50 when I bought it and it was definitely money well spent.Fabricated a bucket level indicator. Cause the sticker from the factory just don't get it.
Definitely worth it. I would have purchased one but, I just like to make stuff.I may be outing myself as an unskilled bucket operator, but a similar bucket level indicator, which is the OEM option for mine, has greatly improved my results running the bucket. If I ran the bucket 8 hours a day 5 days a week probably wouldn’t need it but I run the grapple (can see the leading edge on it) and forks (have to stand to see them but I know the offset on the level indicator for the forks) more than the bucket, so being able to cut to the bottom of a pile of rock without digging a hole in the ground below the rock and contaminating them with dirt is actually a big deal to me. OEM for mine was only $50 when I bought it and it was definitely money well spent.