PHPaul
Well-known member
Equipment
B2650, Pronovost snow blower, Landpride rotary mower, Howard tiller, box blade
I have a roller I made out of a 100# propane tank. It's...okay. However, even full of water there just isn't much weight there.
I ripped out two Blue Spruce trees and of course there's not enough dirt to go back in the hole where the stumps were. I ran the tractor back and forth over it multiple times and packed it as well as I could but the Ag tires leave a really rough surface and even being careful to overlap the tracks, the dirt squishes out on the sides of the tires and leaves ridges.
Back-dragging it with the bucket leaves it smooth, but pulls a bunch of dirt out of the hole.
So what I'm thinking is, attach the roller to a QA plate in such a way that when I tilt the bucket arms all the way forward the QA plate is parallel to the ground and the roller is 90° to the plate. Then I can use the power down of the loader arms to pick the front of the tractor up, putting 1/2 the weight of the tractor on the roller. Steering would be non-existent but if things get too far off course I can pick the roller up make corrections and set it back down.
See any flaws in this idea?
I ripped out two Blue Spruce trees and of course there's not enough dirt to go back in the hole where the stumps were. I ran the tractor back and forth over it multiple times and packed it as well as I could but the Ag tires leave a really rough surface and even being careful to overlap the tracks, the dirt squishes out on the sides of the tires and leaves ridges.
Back-dragging it with the bucket leaves it smooth, but pulls a bunch of dirt out of the hole.
So what I'm thinking is, attach the roller to a QA plate in such a way that when I tilt the bucket arms all the way forward the QA plate is parallel to the ground and the roller is 90° to the plate. Then I can use the power down of the loader arms to pick the front of the tractor up, putting 1/2 the weight of the tractor on the roller. Steering would be non-existent but if things get too far off course I can pick the roller up make corrections and set it back down.
See any flaws in this idea?
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