Russell King
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L185F, Modern Ag Competitor 4’ shredder, Rhino tiller, rear dirt scoop
Eric - two things for you..
How about wrapping chains around just about anything that doesn't move at the front end? Or building a wooden box to attach to the front weights and fill it full of chain/scrap metal/sand...
As far as the weight you have already, you can estimate how much each plate ways (instead of taking them off to weigh them):
Measure the thickness (call that T) in inches
Measure the length (call that L) in inches
Measure the height (call that H) in inches [you can leave out the part above the handle where the hole is)
Multiply T times L times H and times 0.284 = weight in pounds
Multiply that by how many plates you have and you get the total weight.
Don't worry too much about how accurate you measure - be around a quarter inch in each dimension and it will be good enough.
How about wrapping chains around just about anything that doesn't move at the front end? Or building a wooden box to attach to the front weights and fill it full of chain/scrap metal/sand...
As far as the weight you have already, you can estimate how much each plate ways (instead of taking them off to weigh them):
Measure the thickness (call that T) in inches
Measure the length (call that L) in inches
Measure the height (call that H) in inches [you can leave out the part above the handle where the hole is)
Multiply T times L times H and times 0.284 = weight in pounds
Multiply that by how many plates you have and you get the total weight.
Don't worry too much about how accurate you measure - be around a quarter inch in each dimension and it will be good enough.