I been looking into grapples for my L2501. I know that I'll have to install 3rd function valve and I'm pretty set on the summit hydraulic kit. Watched a recent video of someone install it on their L2502 and it looked slick and good quality for the money. Doesn't look that hard, I am mechanically inclined so I feel confident I can do it myself without issue.
However, I am a bit loss on the grapples out there. There are many, many options with all sort different designs. A lot of them are VERY expensive. But sometimes you get what you pay for.
When I was moving brush around with the pallet forks a while ago, I really wasn't a huge fan of it. Kind of a PITA, still beats doing it by hand although that's what I ended up doing is manually putting the brush on the forks
So here I am looking at potential options for a grapple.
I am kinda interest in this design of grapple...
Because it makes the most sense to me with the separate jaws and the base making it more suited for picking up logs and uneven things, also moving rocks and other weird things seems more practical than the other style. However these root bucket grapples seem to be on the heavier side which would limit what I could pick up with the loader. But then again I seem countless videos of people using this style on an LA525 loader just fine and lifting up a lot of heavy stuff.
But then you also have this style of grapple (below) which for whatever reason costs more. But also is lighter, nearly half the weight as the one above, opens wider and seems to be more suited for brush work but I have seen number of times when people have this style of grapple picking up weird shaped logs only on one side its clamped down but not the other side and the load shifts potentially making the tractor unstable. That's almost preventable with the first style of grapple I shared. I suppose the biggest benefit is that the load is closer to the pins.
Other options I have found are bolt on grapples for the bucket, not a fan of this but some like them. I have seen pallet forks with removable grapple, that is something I am interested as well.
Having the ability to put on the grapple and use the forks to move brush easier or move a log around and taking it off to use it as regular forks. Seems like a good cost saving measure.
I'm trying to find the best bang for the buck grapple setup. Do you have any experience with any of these on my size of a tractor? I been told my tractor is too small for a grapple LOL. My brother has a B2601 and has a grapple and uses it all the time! Why can't I on the L2501??
Thanks guys
However, I am a bit loss on the grapples out there. There are many, many options with all sort different designs. A lot of them are VERY expensive. But sometimes you get what you pay for.
When I was moving brush around with the pallet forks a while ago, I really wasn't a huge fan of it. Kind of a PITA, still beats doing it by hand although that's what I ended up doing is manually putting the brush on the forks
So here I am looking at potential options for a grapple.
I am kinda interest in this design of grapple...
Because it makes the most sense to me with the separate jaws and the base making it more suited for picking up logs and uneven things, also moving rocks and other weird things seems more practical than the other style. However these root bucket grapples seem to be on the heavier side which would limit what I could pick up with the loader. But then again I seem countless videos of people using this style on an LA525 loader just fine and lifting up a lot of heavy stuff.
But then you also have this style of grapple (below) which for whatever reason costs more. But also is lighter, nearly half the weight as the one above, opens wider and seems to be more suited for brush work but I have seen number of times when people have this style of grapple picking up weird shaped logs only on one side its clamped down but not the other side and the load shifts potentially making the tractor unstable. That's almost preventable with the first style of grapple I shared. I suppose the biggest benefit is that the load is closer to the pins.
Other options I have found are bolt on grapples for the bucket, not a fan of this but some like them. I have seen pallet forks with removable grapple, that is something I am interested as well.
Having the ability to put on the grapple and use the forks to move brush easier or move a log around and taking it off to use it as regular forks. Seems like a good cost saving measure.
I'm trying to find the best bang for the buck grapple setup. Do you have any experience with any of these on my size of a tractor? I been told my tractor is too small for a grapple LOL. My brother has a B2601 and has a grapple and uses it all the time! Why can't I on the L2501??
Thanks guys