2011 - Volume #35, Issue #1, Page #31
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Home-Built Loader For WD
"I used the ęcut and try' method," he says. "I laid out what I wanted on the shop floor and marked it out with chalk. Once I cut it out, I put the bucket flat to the floor and tacked everything in place to get the right angles."
Once he was satisfied, he made the final welds. The uprights attached to the tractor frame and the top arch were made from the rectangular tubing and carry the brunt of the hydraulic lifting. He welded the flat plate to the bottom of the uprights and bolted them to the frame.
Well tubing was used for the lower arms and 2 by 2-in. tubing to brace the uprights. Various pieces of old pipe were used to fabricate a bucket mount and pivot points.
"I made it a trip dump when I first built it, but that is so unhandy for picking things up and moving them," says Ramberg. "I added a single hydraulic cylinder in the center of the bucket. It's fine for hauling some gravel and light dirt."
Ramberg says he would add a second cylinder if he was using the bucket for heavier loads. As it is, it's a small bucket and was even smaller when he got it off another old loader.
"I made extensions for the sides and bottom," he says.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Don Ramberg, 33501 155th Ave. S.E., Mentor, Minn. 56736 (ph 218 637-2595).
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