Hard to beat the power , traction and versatility of a grader . I do some plowing in northern Canada and wish I had your skill and experience on a grader .
You have Santa's Horses down there too at 1:26 running across your bow of your mountain climbing ramaroo in the triple threat pack and look very very healthy white tail deer. They always have to pass in front and can't wait a split second to pass in the back after the vehicle goes by. I guess where ever they going is really important so as to risk their fur with the near miss hit.
Yes I have thought of that. I am working on places to mount the camera that catch the action. Front view is often boring since you can't see any tools but the front plow. Taking the time to set things up for other shots is sometimes a problem but I will work on it. Thanks
Holy cow there's a pack of the Santa's power units at 2:11, must be really good grazing grounds there, Getting all plump too make the cut to be on the business end of Santa's Present delivery machine.
It would but I don't have that. The front chains are just for controlling the lateral drifting on corners and with the pressure from the angled plows. The chains really help with that too. Thanks
I don't have a loader and can't afford more equipment now. I have rented a loader in the past for that purpose, however, having used both, the grader with a side wing can move it farther off the road on the initial plow because the grader can stay on the road while the wing is off. With the modifications on my front plow, it is strong enough, and the length of the grader makes it so I can move it farther off the road although I cannot pile it as high as a loader. The edge of our roads drops off so much in most locations that any machine can only move it so far off before getting stuck. Adding a side wing to a loader is less stable and the articulation of a grader has lots of benefits also. A grader can counter steer with the front and articulate to change blade angles, keep drives on the road, and crab walk our of nasty places. A loader has some benefits and would work well. I think in most cases I like the grader better and since I can only have one, and that is what I have, that is what I use. Thanks.
ah i see well it was a thought. I am glad the grader is working out for ya. Keep the vids coming love to watch the content hopefully no more repairs.@@AnthonyHutson-ej5pk
72 mile an hour wind gusts in the winter is no fun to be outside, Depending on the real temperature the wind-chill as we call it in Canada after a certain temperature it's basically instant frost bite for exposed flesh and hurt's more after the impacted skin is thawing out & l can't figure that out but I usually dress appropriately when I have to go out walk 2 miles round trip for groceries and cover up completely where only the eyeballs are showing & wearing a Authentic From your country the Overland sheepskin shearling B3 oversized Hood included Bomber jacket and worth every $600+CAD dollars. They even make a female version called the Jane but I wear the men's version just like socks and and most Gloves plus runners there unisex. But always was toasty warm in the upper torso in -45 temp's. With no wind thank God.
Thank you sir, for your videos. I really enjoy your content.
So nice of you
Hard to beat the power , traction and versatility of a grader . I do some plowing in northern Canada and wish I had your skill and experience on a grader .
Thanks 👍
You have Santa's Horses down there too at 1:26 running across your bow of your mountain climbing ramaroo in the triple threat pack and look very very healthy white tail deer. They always have to pass in front and can't wait a split second to pass in the back after the vehicle goes by. I guess where ever they going is really important so as to risk their fur with the near miss hit.
They are actually mule deer and they are not that smart about evading trouble.
Different angles and run byes would make this even better. Nice job clearing fir folks.
Yes I have thought of that. I am working on places to mount the camera that catch the action. Front view is often boring since you can't see any tools but the front plow. Taking the time to set things up for other shots is sometimes a problem but I will work on it. Thanks
Holy cow there's a pack of the Santa's power units at 2:11, must be really good grazing grounds there, Getting all plump too make the cut to be on the business end of Santa's Present delivery machine.
Yep.
Front assist must really help backing out of deep areas.
It would but I don't have that. The front chains are just for controlling the lateral drifting on corners and with the pressure from the angled plows. The chains really help with that too. Thanks
Have you thought about getting a front end loader to push back some of those tight spots and making turnarounds easier to clean out?
I don't have a loader and can't afford more equipment now. I have rented a loader in the past for that purpose, however, having used both, the grader with a side wing can move it farther off the road on the initial plow because the grader can stay on the road while the wing is off. With the modifications on my front plow, it is strong enough, and the length of the grader makes it so I can move it farther off the road although I cannot pile it as high as a loader. The edge of our roads drops off so much in most locations that any machine can only move it so far off before getting stuck. Adding a side wing to a loader is less stable and the articulation of a grader has lots of benefits also. A grader can counter steer with the front and articulate to change blade angles, keep drives on the road, and crab walk our of nasty places. A loader has some benefits and would work well. I think in most cases I like the grader better and since I can only have one, and that is what I have, that is what I use. Thanks.
ah i see well it was a thought. I am glad the grader is working out for ya. Keep the vids coming love to watch the content hopefully no more repairs.@@AnthonyHutson-ej5pk
72 mile an hour wind gusts in the winter is no fun to be outside, Depending on the real temperature the wind-chill as we call it in Canada after a certain temperature it's basically instant frost bite for exposed flesh and hurt's more after the impacted skin is thawing out & l can't figure that out but I usually dress appropriately when I have to go out walk 2 miles round trip for groceries and cover up completely where only the eyeballs are showing & wearing a Authentic From your country the Overland sheepskin shearling B3 oversized Hood included Bomber jacket and worth every $600+CAD dollars. They even make a female version called the Jane but I wear the men's version just like socks and and most Gloves plus runners there unisex. But always was toasty warm in the upper torso in -45 temp's. With no wind thank God.
I have a pair of Carhart extreme weather coveralls in the grader with a beanie and hoodie coat in case I have to get out for long. Thanks
Time for a LaRue T70.
A blower would be really nice at times. Just can't afford everything I would like for every scenario. Thanks