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Let's set some trusses... No, not happening..

PinkJohn

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2019
Messages
19
Location
Milwaukee, WI
Perhaps worth a few laughs or you've been there before but my truss setting plan for the weekend was a bust.

Shortly after the telehandler was delivered (I was so excited), I needed to call this:

IMG_2007.jpg

To rescue and pull this out of the back yard:

IMG_2010.jpg

All kinds of fun and excitement and will try a different approach next weekend...
I'm over the disappointment, and can laugh a little now.
 
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PinkJohn

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2019
Messages
19
Location
Milwaukee, WI
The rain has been on and off all spring, certainly more than usual. I figured that it would leave some good ruts for sure and the first 40' went fine, then it just sunk.
I've never operated something that heavy before (near 30,000 lbs) really had no idea that it would be as bad as it was.
 

b-boy

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2013
Messages
2,155
Location
Buffalo NY
I did the same thing with my pickup this Spring. It's been a muck-fest all season. That's an embarassing phone call to make. :D
 

Kaizen

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Joined
Jan 9, 2015
Messages
6,948
Location
New England
damn........all the advice and no one warned about this. guess i was picturing my job site not pretty grass. i rented a 45 foot boom lift and they recommended 4 wheel drive ones. very glad they did or i would have been taking down fencing to have a rig like that pull me out of one predicament.
so did you rent it for just that weekend? whats the new plan?
 

Aerospace Eng

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Joined
Jun 2, 2019
Messages
93
Location
Zelienople, PA
The tow bill is cheaper than the repair bill that action could have created.

I have a mid 1990s VR90B. I would have no problem sticking the forks in the ground and pushing back out. If the boom can lift 9,000 lb in my case when fully raised, it can push back 9,000 lb. I just wouldn't want a sideload on the boom.

I also have used the boom to raise the front end so tires could be changed.

Here's an old thread from another site. Check out post #25.

https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/bobcat-construction-equipment/160568-compact-telehandler.html
 
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PinkJohn

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2019
Messages
19
Location
Milwaukee, WI
Tried using the boom, no go, just sunk. Put a ton of boards under, it just pushed them into the ground. Tried for a few hours before making the call to the tow company. There was just nothing to get traction or to push against
 
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PinkJohn

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2019
Messages
19
Location
Milwaukee, WI
damn........all the advice and no one warned about this. guess i was picturing my job site not pretty grass. i rented a 45 foot boom lift and they recommended 4 wheel drive ones. very glad they did or i would have been taking down fencing to have a rig like that pull me out of one predicament.
so did you rent it for just that weekend? whats the new plan?

Yeah I just had it rented for the weekend and had all my helpers lined up.

At the moment I'm considering renting a 24' crank/material lift and doing that from the inside. Not sure why I didn't think of it earlier, I used a smaller version to get the main beam up over the garage doors.

Been so crazy busy just hammering away I wasn't thinking through all the options.
 

dr_clyde

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Joined
Jan 7, 2009
Messages
6,451
Location
Holland, MI
The rain has been on and off all spring, certainly more than usual. I figured that it would leave some good ruts for sure and the first 40' went fine, then it just sunk.
I've never operated something that heavy before (near 30,000 lbs) really had no idea that it would be as bad as it was.

Yep,

Unfortunately that's more common than you think. Telehandlers are way heavier than they look.

My step-mother's brother buried a Skytrack in his back yard up to the chassis. Nothing he did could get it out. Sometimes they just get buried.

Had to have 2 tows to get it to dry land.
 

rustyjames

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Joined
Dec 28, 2008
Messages
1,077
Location
central nj
Telehandlers are quite heavy, and they often have the tires filled, which adds to the easy to get stuck factor.
 

Marctrees

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Joined
Mar 5, 2015
Messages
6,265
Location
TX/LA border - Toledo Bend
Don't know the whole story here, but just sayin' on my 38 x 35 x 10 4/12 5'OC wood pole building the trusses were raised by a bobcat w a simple little extension boom and two men up on the wall at the two ends.

No hassles, wen't up very quickly.

3 guys total... but they do this as a team full time.

Marc
 

OneOfEm

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 7, 2015
Messages
255
Yeah I just had it rented for the weekend and had all my helpers lined up.

At the moment I'm considering renting a 24' crank/material lift and doing that from the inside. Not sure why I didn't think of it earlier, I used a smaller version to get the main beam up over the garage doors.

Been so crazy busy just hammering away I wasn't thinking through all the options.

My wife and I placed mine with a hand crank material/duct lift. The slab had been poured previously, and it was easy and stable.
 

fire2892

Active member
Joined
Apr 10, 2019
Messages
43
Location
Georgia
I was worried about the cement trucks getting stuck when they poured my slab. We had a wet winter and I had one trash hole that I had dug out and filled with good dirt, it was still too soft for my comfort and right where the trucks needed to drive. I laid a board road out of some rough sawn oak I had laying around. They sent the 6x6 trucks out and when they went across it looked like mud squishing between your toes. I got lucky and they poured 71 yards without a hitch. My buddy poured about a month after me, he wasn’t so lucky, first truck got stuck 200 yards from his slab, second truck pulled the first one out and they poured 35 yards a skid steer bucket at a time.
 

BitDrive

Active member
Joined
Jan 11, 2019
Messages
32
Location
Land of Lincoln
...My buddy poured about a month after me, he wasn’t so lucky, first truck got stuck 200 yards from his slab, second truck pulled the first one out and they poured 35 yards a skid steer bucket at a time.

Yikes, thats gotta be more than 70 bucket trips... Man this wet weather is brutal.
 

Prospecter

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Joined
May 16, 2015
Messages
2,434
Location
Maine
Getting stuck is one way we keep our man cards! Got my tractor stuck while mowing yesterday where I've never been stuck before in 35 years!

(Sorry for your trouble and expense, though. Great attitude!)
 
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