[AT] Pulling a sheepsfoot with a Ford 8n
Chuck Saunders
csaunders at bluevalleyk12.org
Thu Feb 10 13:39:49 PST 2005
That is my concern Carl. I think that the commercial ones I found
started at 10,000 lbs and up. I think in your case when you had a piece
of equipment that is sized and rated for a TD-18B and you switch to a
tractor that is not an equivalent match you are going to have trouble. I
think that Cecils' wisdom of lower lifts will go towards reducing the
rutting problem. I think it is similar to pulling too much plow with a
tractor. If you overload the tractor your field will look pretty bad.
Thanks
Chuck Saunders
Kansas City, MO
carl gogol wrote:
> I would suggest that the biggest problem you might find with pulling a
> sheep's foot with a rubber tired tractor is traction and rutting if
> the soil is at all moist. I can remember the first four feet of dam
> constructed on our farm back in 1967 was quite moist and a large
> sheep's foot was easily pulled by a TD-18B. The problem started when
> a front idler went and there was no time to fix it. We had two TD-15s
> working to bring the material to the top of the dam. The dam was
> already up at least 3 feet and a 4 WD loader was quickly rented to
> replace the dozer. The top of the dam soon got very rutted as the
> loader didn't have the guts to grade as it pulled the roller. I can't
> picture the roller a 9n could handle, but it would have to be tiny
> compared to what is normally used to get specified compaction.
> Carl Gogol
> Manlius, NY
> (2) AC D-14, AC 914H
> Simplicity 3112 & 7116
> Kubota F-2400
> ----- Original Message ----- From: <CBear81438 at aol.com>
> To: <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2005 2:02 PM
> Subject: Re: [AT] Pulling a sheepsfoot with a Ford 8n
>
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