I took a tour of the Arapahoe Coroner's facility in Colorado. The X-Ray room was part of the tour and they had some pictures showing certain items found in bodies. One was an image of a skull with a tow hook embedded in it. I asked what happened and the answer was the guy was pulling a stump out of the ground using a vehicle and the chain snapped which caused the hook to go straight into his head. Be careful out there!
The tractor scenes, cut the tree just above the hitch point, loop the chain so the hook is opposite side than the tractor, then take the chain over the stump. This provides the leverage to snap the roots and the tree will come out much easier. This is also much easier on the equipment. Growing up on a farm you learn these things.😅😅
Minuto 3:50. Ao invés de engatar a corrente na barra de tração do trator, engata no hidráulico de levante. Além de diminuir o tracionamento do trator no começo da tentativa, daí patinar tanto, depois o operador se expõe ao risco de morrer sob a máquina, que pode tombar sobre ela mesma, uma vez que a carga do tronco sendo arrancado, passa a ficar acima do centro de gravidade da máquina.
I can't believe those guys on the tractors, pulling with chains, at the first of the video were doing that WITHOUT protecting themselves if the chain would break and come flying back at them !!?? They could have at least laid a heavy blanket or tarp on the chain to keep it from flying up toward them if it broke. Wow
@@nicolasseydoux5775 One of the best reasons for using a chain instead of a rope or wire or fabric strap is that there isn't much elasticity in chain so they don't usually spring much when they break, and you’re right. Only 40 years experience as a crane operator. Obviously nothing near your skills.
@@edition-deluxe You saying I am a city boy? You could not be further from the truth, did you not see the first tractor, front wheels coming off the ground, little further and he is dead with a tractor on top of him. A point I learned 50 years ago, at least 50 years, and never lived in a town.
I might be confused as to why someone would turn 3 nice logs into wood chips when they look good enough for dimensional lumber, but I learned one thing for sure. I'm going to need a bigger tractor!
Minuto 2:00. Que desperdício de madeira. A parte mais nobre do tronco cortado a mais de meio metro do solo e depois ainda feito cavilha para ajustar um macaco hidráulico!!! Não pode dobrar as costas para fazer corte raso e inclinado, com pequena gaipa?
Can someone explain in the first part,what the point to do all those things? Isn't easy just cut the tree with chainsaw so it can fall in specific direction? Like diagonally at the base or make a just specific cut so it can fall it direction it should.
In the fir tractor pulling clip those men were looking at a serious injury if that chain broke, it was way to short and unprotected…It should have had a sleeve or heavy duty cover in case it broke…In the case of the Army truck and small tractor this was also a foolish pull because the guy on the tractor was unprotected, the truck had no weight over the drive axles making it bounce around and while we see it pull the stump again at what cost ?…
this is a Fahr , I'm not sure which one, due to the square shape of the fenders I guess it's from the 60's... In 1968 Fahr merged with Deutz, thus creating the brand Deutz-Fahr
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Dangerous alright!you always pull stumps from an attached plate under the tractor. Did so for years.prevents the tractor rearing up and backslapping. Mate your an accident waiting to happen!
Good grief! In the situations of the whole stump/roots didnt have to be removed, why beat the hell into your tractors and other equipment when can cut the stump off 4" - 6" or more below ground level and then fill the hole back in.
@@will7its You're obviously a professional at grossly exaggerating!!! When it's done right, there's not going to be a hole in the yard every spring. I been cutting stumps 4" to 6" below the ground and packing dirt on top for the past 20 years. There is no hole every spring or any other time of year
@@tymz-r-achangin No Im a professional at filling the holes. What do you think happens to all that wood left just under the surface??? It rots more and more and gets worse not better. Not to mention all the huge fungus that grows up thru the lawn from the chunks that get pushed up with the frost. You pay a lot to have them cut and ground and you pay every year redoing, while you guys take the money and run. Real professional.
@@will7its News Flash: stumps dont rot for years and years and so youre not going to be filling in holes every spring as you claimed. Even 20 years after doing my own stumps, I've only done about 4 shovel fulls of dirt where the top of the stump started rotting and so the ground started settling a very small amount, and there is no fungus. Even did 2 stumps for my neighbor about 12 years ago which havent settled much either. Our trees were maple, oak, and birch. Maybe your trees are different, your climate is different, and/or your soil conditions are different which causes some people problems that we dont have here in our tri-state area. However I'm not here to argue and so hey wish you the best and hope you have a good week :o)
Ma perché fanno certi video... gli alberi si cimano e si usano cavi fissagi il piu in alto possibile e piu lunghi possibile. A disposizione per consigli. Casale della luna docet
03:30: Wie ruiniert man einen Traktor? How to ruin a tractor? 04:30 Wenn man die Kette am Baum noch höher anschlägt hebt es den Trecker noch leichter aus der Hinterachse. If you attach the chain to the boom even higher, it lifts the tractor out of the rear axle even easier
I thinks it’s funny to watch city boys cut trees down and don’t know what they are doing. They cut a notch in the tree that is to small. You need to notch a tree half way thru so the tree falls the way you want it to go.
Haven’t any of these clowns ever thought of attaching the chain to the FRONT of the tractor and pulling in reverse? This would eliminate the tendency for the rear wheels to lift when pulling forwards and reducing traction. Just sayin!!!
My guess is can we place the chain ANY FURTHER FROM THE GROUND? How about on a lowest point of the 3 pt. hitch? Like it is designed for, maybe? No wonder farmer dude has wasted even more of his resources on a J.D. that he cant do most repairs on due to "propertarianism" 🖕JD!!!( if it aint Red it goes in the shed )