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Small tractor bucket forks.

lostmymanual

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Apr 18, 2017
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East/Central Kansas, USA
This is something I knocked out last summer. I had several drop pieces of 1/4" plate following fab of my welding booth. I had planned a larger welding table but I ended up paying someone local to do the cutting for me. They hacked it all to heck and left me with a bunch of pieces that didn't fit after sitting on it for a month.

I went down to my friendly welding store where I bought my MIG and contracted my bottle, picked up a Hyperthem plasma cutter and never looked back. I love my plasma cutter!

Now keep in mind that I learned to weld by making that welding table shown in the background. I'm an automation tech offshore, not a welder. So with that being said:

I had the plate handy. I wanted something that I could offload heavy items out of my truck with (like a tractor box blade or a shop compressor) and to pick up that welding bench and move it around as needed quicker than using jacks and rollers. Basically, I was tired of chaining things to my bucket and dealing with loads swinging.

I priced the forks built to the specs I wanted (I eventually plan on buliding a heavier duty skid for my 3-point lift) and came up with about $500+ freight. Ouch. I kept the plan simple and only had to buy the rectangle tube. Everything else was leftover from the bench.

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I bracketed in my rectangle tube with 1/4" plate. I remember being really excited about the weld below because I managed to go from pushing to pulling the weld on the fly, in the same pass. I was pretty psyched about that being that this was literally my second welding project. I also used substantually fewer grinding discs than when I was building the bench. :)

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I welded in a socket for a set screw so I could clamp the forks to the bucket. I used leftover hardened bolts for this as they were leftover from when I made the welding bench foot levelers. I planned on having another 2 feet on that before they butchered my plate.

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Then for a dry fit to see how long I wanted the forks and to do a little stress testing before spending any more time on the project.

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I then realized I was going to bend the bucket pretty quick, so I added the "wing" brackets to spread the pressure across a greater area and help keep me from bending/shearing the bucket. I rounded them because I absolutely see myself kicking them on my way round the bucket some day... I then cut down the tube to length, notched out a triangle on both front ends and hammered the steel up to the top of the skid before rounding them off too.

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A little surface prep/degreasing, some Valspar industrial primer, some orange to match the tractor.

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Load tested by tearing the box blade out of the weeds so if I dropped it, no big deal. That's 500lbs which is about as much as I care to put on the end of an extended lever like that. No problems other than the poor little tractor struggling. It's not rated for much in the front but serves my purposes. I'm sure the bucket or hydraulics would give up before the forks would. Now I have something that I can keep for years and not worry about instead of the commercially available forks for about 1/10th of what I would have spent on buying them. But the best part was just doing the project. It was a lot of fun and a learning experience.

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f150skidoo

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Nice job, Once you have pallet forks you will never understand how you lived with out them before.
 
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ducksface

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I think the fan and cart could use an additional coat to fully cover.

Now you need to build a shovel head to fit on the end of one of those tines. Slips on, use a ratchet strap to hold it.
Works almost as well as a backhoe and in some instances, better.
It'll pop saplings right out of the ground.
 
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pmason0

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Nov 12, 2011
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East Tennessee
Nice project, would like to make something like that, I do have a quick disconnect bucket so that might help too.
 
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lostmymanual

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Apr 18, 2017
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Location
East/Central Kansas, USA
I think the fan and cart could use an additional coat to fully cover.

Now you need to build a shovel head to fit on the end of one of those tines. Slips on, use a ratchet strap to hold it.
Works almost as well as a backhoe and in some instances, better.
It'll pop saplings right out of the ground.

Ha. Yeah, that's why I bought the el-cheapo HF cart. I figured I'd have paint, burns and all kinds of gashes on it in less than a year regardless.

Nice project, would like to make something like that, I do have a quick disconnect bucket so that might help too.

I wish I had a quick disconnect bucket. It would be really convenient to use a QD plate and just make up a skid for lifting.
 
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lostmymanual

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Joined
Apr 18, 2017
Messages
80
Location
East/Central Kansas, USA
I think the fan and cart could use an additional coat to fully cover.

Now you need to build a shovel head to fit on the end of one of those tines. Slips on, use a ratchet strap to hold it.
Works almost as well as a backhoe and in some instances, better.
It'll pop saplings right out of the ground.

You got a pick of this?
I could see the advantage over using my backhoe if I'm able to plow through several saplings. As you can see in the bottom two picks, I have a lot of saplings that need to be ripped out. I was thinking of making my own Piranha Tooth Bar for the front of the bucket to tear them out with.
 

ducksface

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I'll get a picture for you tomorrow.
It's a big shovel head with a sleeve on the back. The sleeve fits over one of the tines and you use a ratchet strap to keep it from sliding off or you can put a pin in it.

Northern as them
Look up tine shovel
Or
Fork shovel

I never remember brand names.
It should pop up on the first page of a search.
 
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lostmymanual

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Apr 18, 2017
Messages
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Location
East/Central Kansas, USA
I'll get a picture for you tomorrow.
It's a big shovel head with a sleeve on the back. The sleeve fits over one of the tines and you use a ratchet strap to keep it from sliding off or you can put a pin in it.

Northern as them
Look up tine shovel
Or
Fork shovel

I never remember brand names.
It should pop up on the first page of a search.


Thank you. I'm very interested in this. I was thinking this would be really handy for helping the Wife out. Since I've already made the tines, I might as well use them for as much as I can. It would be a lot more selective for smaller jobs that the swath the piranha tooth will make.

That's what I did. Used a plywood template and cut out a series of "W"'s. Works well, but could have used another "W" or two.

I keep plenty of ply handy for just such things. Then I reuse it again for something else. I've used it for plasma jigs. Heck, I've even used round grinding discs for circle jigs for radius cuts. I like your bucket. I'll keep in mind the extra bucket teeth. Now that you mention it, I could see why that would be ideal. I was thinking of taking (2) peices of 1/4" plate (if I have that much handy) and cutting plain teeth " /\/\/\/\/\ " in them, then offsetting the plates on top of each other for a kind of sheering effect. I'm just wondering if the teeth will do more sapling shearing than I want rather than pulling/ripping.
 

Boilerhouse

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Muskoka
I went with the W design as it copied the Piranha pattern. No reason why a V pattern wouldn't work well. I use it mainly for general loader work and it has made a huge improvement. The one time I was into an area with saplings, I found it tore the bark off and bent them over. They will likely succumb to stress vs. being physically uprooted.

I also made up a ball hitch receiver which hooks over one of the tooth bar supports and prevents it from slipping sideways. It works well for shunting the boat and log splitter around the property.

BTW - those forks look awesome. That's also on my bucket list!
 

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ducksface

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Two knives I've yet to finish. One will be a foot wide and set back on the tines eight inches or so. Center (in your case a sapling) between the eight inches of tine, plunge knife underground. Cut under ground and no divot to replace. Will cut sod once you get the hang of it.

Round end knife will hang off to the side of the tractor/tines and be sharp as possible. Will whack the **** out of whatever needs the **** whacked out of it. It will also mount with round end to the front like a tine extension in case anything needs pierced.

Would have been done by now but I have found that the rabbit brush LOVES being trimmed underground, so I have to live with the divot from the shovel for now.
 
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ducksface

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My very very handy rake.
An adapted Sportsmansguide.com rake that bolts to the tines through the holes I drilled in them.
The rake will eventually be adapted to the top of my bucket so I can flip the opening of the bucket all the way down so the rake can be used and then flip the bucket up and scoop. Right now it's nicer to have it on the fork extensions so I can reach under trees and I can also drag dead hangers out from above.

My favorite
The loading platform.
4x6 tractor supply store stall mat and the pallet they came on.

Holds a squat load of stuff for transport, can stand on it to trim trees.

I keep four tines on the fork unit so I can plunge in to brush piles and lift out a load. Two wouldn't do it, four is a challenge but you learn how to align branches and the push under for a lift.
 
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lostmymanual

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Apr 18, 2017
Messages
80
Location
East/Central Kansas, USA
I also made up a ball hitch receiver which hooks over one of the tooth bar supports and prevents it from slipping sideways. It works well for shunting the boat and log splitter around the property.

BTW - those forks look awesome. That's also on my bucket list!
Thanks.
Receiver hitches are on my "bucket list" too. I hijacked the one I had set aside to help someone out with their front mounted wench on a hitch mod.
I wish I snapped some pics of that. It turned out pretty good. I'm not one for tons of truck accessories but that is pretty cool and he actually used it quite a bit this year. He damn well better answer the phone if I'm stuck in BFE now...

My very very handy rake.
An adapted Sportsmansguide.com rake that bolts to the tines through the holes I drilled in them.
The rake will eventually be adapted to the top of my bucket so I can flip the opening of the bucket all the way down so the rake can be used and then flip the bucket up and scoop. Right now it's nicer to have it on the fork extensions so I can reach under trees and I can also drag dead hangers out from above.

My favorite
The loading platform.
4x6 tractor supply store stall mat and the pallet they came on.

Holds a squat load of stuff for transport, can stand on it to trim trees.

I keep four tines on the fork unit so I can plunge in to brush piles and lift out a load. Two wouldn't do it, four is a challenge but you learn how to align branches and the push under for a lift.

Thanks for all the info. I like all of it. The pallet with the stall mat was a real find. I see possibilities in so many places around the property. Tree limbing, working on the ceiling of my shop to working on the home. We have sandy soil so I have to drop a sheet of ply on the ground to even try and plant a ladder. I'd just as soon skip that and use the bucket as a lift.

I see the rake as being pretty handy too. That looks similar to ATV rakes I've seen. I could use it around my place for sure. The bucket-rake idea would be golden. I'm all about not having to get off the tractor and manually load stuff. It kills momentum of progress (and my back).

Thanks for the post on the shovel. I wasn't following how it slipped on and ratcheted down at first. It also reminded me that I forgot to mention the top plate is a grab handle of sorts that I can hook with chains/ratches/come-alongs.

The first mod I'll add when I get back in the area is a couple bolt holes. I've got some cold roll tubing on hand that would make great swivel bushings for eyebolts.

I need to put a couple chain hooks directly on the bucket still. I forgot I had them so they're sitting around collecting dust right now because of my habit of project hopping.
 
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lostmymanual

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Apr 18, 2017
Messages
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Location
East/Central Kansas, USA
Nice job, Once you have pallet forks you will never understand who you lived with out them before.

Thanks!
They're not quite as robust as the stuff you make. I don't think my little tractor would be able to pick up the bulk of the material you use for your projects.

I have an M101-A2 surplus trailer I was going to convert to a dump bed for landscaping stuff eventually. Went through your dump trailer build and have some ideas now on how to get it where I want it. I need some hydro parts if I'm ever going to get started. Then I'll have the parts I need to start fabbing up hinge mounts and know where I can plan my frame cutting.
 

ducksface

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Yes, that's an atv rake.
It still works on those. No mods to it except as below:
The only mod to make it fit the forks were two holes in the fork and replacing the rake tine bolt on the closest tine to the fork with a larger grade eight.
I could pop the heads right off grade 8 3/8"bolts.
Have switched to some 9.1(?) grade aircraft 1/2" fine thread I has laying around.
No shattering and no break so far.

I have a swap going on with a local GJ member who is making me a rake to end all rakes out of 2 inch square tubing.
 
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