Loved watching you put this back up on it's tracks!!! So gentle, so easy. Goes to show everyone that when you actually have the knowledge and use it, life gets a bit easier. Thanks.
The D7E is my all-time favorite crawler. I ran 47A's and 48A's for Weyerhauser in southern Oregon in the early 1980's, and still miss those machines. God, they're awesome!
@@robertlloyd7167 Those D7E's are built , solid dozer , 5-3/4" bore 4 cylinder turbo i got a 47A ,we rebuilt the engine and the hydraulic cylinders , put in a new radiator,, its a power house for its size and its got that sound that demands respect. i think i am. going to put a brand new undercarriage on it next year., the only thing, is if i put the the new bottom on it, it will be so pretty with those new grousers on it , i won't want to use it at all
I once slid a 4WD tractor sideways into a fairly deep sheaugh(a wide open drain or watercourse) in my only defence the tyres were dammed near slick, I first attempted digging away below the upper rear tyre to no avail, she would not come back down, she just sat and gently rocked on the now securely bottomed out rear tyre, while pivoting on the front axle, now credit to David Brown's engineering of the 1980's the low oil pressure light never came on, despite the near 45 degree side ways position. Anyway, since it was safe to run the engine, and she was bottomed out already and could go no deeper, I creedled her back and forth, putting cut branches and brash beneath the tyres each time , until at last, a few hours later, I got her out, just as a local farmer turned up. As I started to espouse my heroic efforts in my entirely successful and unaided extraction, Boydie punctured my ego by stating; "I would be more interested in how you put her in the sheaugh" Which is my long-winded way of saying, thanks for the upfront "confession" as to the how the mishap happened. Marcus P.S. She got new tyres the next week!
Glad everybody was safe after that and the recovery was easy to, My guess is it just flopped over on it's side slowly just like it did when they pulled it up. I've heard old guys I know well , say they've seen stuff go over like it's in slow motion on sites over the years. Guys tipped a crane in the river by here while trying to rescue a semi truck and it's load of steel coils that fell off down the bank. The guy felt it start going over and just climbed out the cab and watched it go. they had fun getting that out though as it was on a narrow road by a single tracked old country bridge. they had 2 smaller cranes that fitted down the road and used big concrete blocks to anchor them down to stop them moving during the lift.
From what I read this slid off the Trailer immediately after being loaded and before the Trailer was moved.. Every one I've ever seen slide has been while loading or mere seconds after, well before it could be chained down or moved.
Almost did the same thing loading my new to me D5 hystat on I-beam ramps meant for a wider tractor. Got up the ramps ok but when it hit the breakover it tried to twist to the right. I got it corrected as it bucked forward butit was really close to just twisting off.
Stuff happens..... Liked that "soft landing". Neighbor rolled a Cat excavator unloading it and got banged up pretty good. Asphalt tracks and a slick trailer did the trick. It was a farmer who hadn't had it for very long. He won't load it anymore. He lets his son do it now. Think he may have crapped his pants. He won't admit it but son said there was a strange odor in the cab now........Great recovery and appears little damage.
I never did put one off the Side, but I've come so Close SO many times you might as well SAY I have. I never understood Why most operators would NOT Load or Unload their machines. Lot of men Killed that way, though, even WITH the ROPS canopy. ALWAYS wear your seat belts, Guys. I won't wear one in the truck, or a four-wheeler, but ALWAYS when Loading/unloading machines.
I turned a big Ford BAC how over on it side. Tilt trailer. Frost on everything. Hauling with bucket offer the truck. You name it Accident waiting to happen. Back tires of how got to trailer tires and I had to give it a bit of fuel. When I did it just stood up on the back tires and come down with the left front tire off of the trailer. The bucket over the dump bed held it a bit but not enough. I stood up and watched it in gold trying not to panic. And it worked. I stood up and knew it was going over to the left so I grabbed the right gender with a pretty firm squeeze and didn't let go. The how was laying on its left side and was standing on the ground two feet from the how with a still nice firm grip on that fender. It had no top on it and for me to stay and ride that out I think would have been foolish.
I've seen that happen a couple of times while loading or unloading. I personally had one slide off the side of the side of a red clay hill after about 3 days of rain.
Wow! The comment clowns are running wild in here! What few realize is when on a trailer, or other hard surface, how little of the track is actually in contact. What you have is a lot of weight on several small rounded cleats and they will slide. Wet wood is slick as snot and when they start to slide it happens fast. Often during or directly after loading and before chains even become part of the picture.
Dont know if anyone gives a shit but if you are bored like me during the covid times you can stream pretty much all the latest movies and series on InstaFlixxer. I've been streaming with my girlfriend lately xD
i rented a lot of small equipment that i've run off and on trailers. i'm wondering (and i don't know the answer) but wouldn't winching heavy equipment onto a trailer always be the safest loading technique? i've watched a ton of videos on loading equipment (for my own education) and it always appears that the machine placing power to the tracks always causes the accident where one track loses traction. winching would eliminate this risk.
As you say now, me too for educational purposes... It's a lot of a Palaver to winch everything on - BUT... for peace of mind + another attachment & securing point. It's a question of breaching a tradition.
For u critical knuckleheads until you have that happen to you and experience the exact circumstances causing the incident you should be quiet and watch how they recovered and did the right thing to let it sit. The ROPS really work
As a an old and "critical knuckle head" that has done some bed work before. Please explain why the cat was not chained down to the bed when it "slipped off" the wet [or not wet] deck and landed on its side.. Best way to not have this "experience" happen to you is to avoid the experience altogether by chaining the cat down in the first place . Other than the bruised ego I am glad everyone is okay and everything is back on its feet in good shape. Have a safe trip next load gentlemen
HITNMISSNUT well what do ya know.....u r exactly the knucklhead i was refering to...no need for you to puff out your chest and show off what would do and spotlight your big ego....these fellows are aware of what went wrong and what to do right next time. Your words and mine really don't matter.....they know. So don't be a hotshot know it all idiotic loudmouth "knocklhead".....by the way...mine is bigger than yours...
@@tracypittman1646 Never seen one slip off a bed when loading....ever.....ice snow... no caulks....over the beaver tails. Looks pretty flat to be slipping off a bed loading. Some one made a very big mistake no matter what
Saw a man loading a tractor on a trailer with diamond plate for decking the trailer was parked with the front pointed downhill slightly after he got it on the trailer he tried to stop and it just slid to the front of the trailer ( deck was not wet ) definitely could have gone much worse.
Think from some of the detailed replies here, there is a case for making a video to show HOW it should be done properly. Level surfaces etc go wthout saying: but sometimes you have no option for recovery - OR even delivery / shedding. Everyone AND the Regulatory Authorities like to spout forth and Throw the Book AFTERWARDS, time to be more Proactive.
I would never attempt to load a steel tracked machine on a steel decked trailer. Just picture the grim reaper standing on the trailer guiding you on. There’s a reason lowboys made for hauling dozers have oak lumber for the bed material.
I loaded a small rubber tracked hoe today with the rain pouring down but you never know what'll happen when they squeak. I found out why skates are made of steel when trying to get rid of some ice on a road with a track loader. Never again! Live and learn. We do the best we can do but sometimes................
If you'll notice as he pulls it upright, the road shoulder is very soft looks like he tried to turn uphill with one track on the road and one on the shoulder. Right track dug in and sunk... threw him off of his center of gravity. I can see it happening.
Dozer1642 yes it is a theory and somewhat uninformed because I haven't seen anyone say what actually happened. Maybe I didn't make that clear. I meant to say that that COULD have been what happened. As I'm guessing that you already know, most dozers will slide downhill before they tip over. But if that track wedged deep enough in the mud, it would not slide and if the angle of the dozer became steep enough it could tip over in a situation like that. If you'll notice in the video, when the guy pulls the dozer back upright, the left track is BARELY resting on the ground at that angle which means almost all of the weight is resting on the outside edge of the right track. It could easily tip over again. Another good example is that there are sports cars that can drift or go into a 360 degree spin at 100 mph no problem. But let him hit a small 3 in. deep pot hole and what do you think is going to happen? So yeah I don't really know what youre trying to get at other than leaving a snarky remark. Many times, those that leave remarks like that on plausible comments like mine aren't necessarily good equipment operators. Not assuming that you aren't.... just sayin.
WPOG84 scroll up. Read description. I operate bulldozers for a living. There is zero chance of that dozer tipping over on that shoulder. Have a good day.
Operator OK.He was on it, ROPS worked. Towed into field to let fluids settle overnight. Helping friend of mine upright his dozer. No apparent damage. Rain shower came up while he was working, finished job, he loaded on trailer with wet planking, then dozer slid off after parked on flat deck. Combination of wet wood and some mud in tracks.
They'll do that and the old 4-banger eased it right over. I dearly love to hear the old 7-E's snort. Ran one in the Army a bunch and an 'F' afterward. Liked the 'E' a LOT better. That 'G' will be fine. A good nap and off she'll go again.
All the 7's were 4-cylinder till the 'F' series came out with a 6. The 'E's were 4 3/4 inch bore and an 8 inch stroke with turbo, 1200 r.p.m. no load if I remember right. The 'F's were a 6 cylinder like a D6-C. I've operated the E's and F's a good bit and the G's a little and what I can tell, a G is like the difference between a D6-B and a C. The F's were fast and powerful. But I still like the old slow turning E series but that's just me.
Wow, I thought that was going to be such a hard hit when it came over but it really wasn't. Not sure if you had a plan for that or just luck the blade hit first.
Tornado must have tipped it over.. or maybe a big flying magnet passed by at a high rate of speed pulling the tractor over then flying away back to the planet rallipretac. I would say it slid off a trailer.. but it's not snowing there..
Operator had no control over how it landed. After certain point gravity takes over and it does what it does.Right side was lower than left is why it had soft landing.
I've seen this condition before and it can happen again. Its called "Going belly up" No known cure for the problem... Hope that old girl keeps her tracks down for now on...
Dozer was left to sit in field over night. Fluids checked next day. Was back to work next day and is still running fine. Engine shut off immediately, when it slid off trailer.
My favorite dozer and log cat was the HD-16 Allis-Chalmers. It never broke down but the Cat's did. Had a Carco winch and Esco fairlead which were twice as fast as a Hyster.
That was sweet, glad they didn't try and start it, I flipped one walking a steep angle packing the dirt on the back side of a hill by a building, you have to change all fluids, or you'll be headed to the Cat Dealership for big repairs... 😉
@brokendown63 i agree man ; people wanna give their comments without knowing the facts and my reply to them is ( opinions are like A$$holes everybody got one and most of them stink )
How could have anyone flip a caterpillar on it's side??? I have rode D8 cat dozers on 2:1slopes all day long and never flipped a dozer all the years I operated equipment..
When I saw this I knew it had to be off a trailer, then I read the description. When it was flipped over I could see how it hit the ground. My trailer has steel plate on the sides so the dozer cannot slide off. Once I saw an excavator slide off while being chained on the trailer. One side of the trailer sank in the mud and the excavator slid off at a pace a snail could outrun. It was a rainy day.
MrWhatevauwanacallme where did you get that from? Not in the description, nor spoken of in the video. You would be surprised at the number of people who think they can move equipment like that, without securing the load, im in the business, ive seen countless dozers slung off trailers, because the driver didnt think he needed it for a short move
In going on 40 years in the forest industry here I have seen dozers, hoes and skidders slide off beds with the "it was just a small move of X# of kilometres" excuse being used as a reason. The worst a but-n-top [3800 Madill] that was loaded sideways on a bed slip off and over a bank.....that one required 2 8K winch cats and a yarder to be dismantled and moved . But-n-top down for 10 days plus repairs and plus ROPS recertification. Plus a yarder down for most of 5 shifts......Plus 8Ks....no clue what the final tally was for that little faux pas but I will guess 40K +/- Mention that around the owner and you can hear his ulcers hit full boil from the next room to this day. It gets very costly very quick when corners are cut....like not chaining things down. Be safe
Loved watching you put this back up on it's tracks!!! So gentle, so easy. Goes to show everyone that when you actually have the knowledge and use it, life gets a bit easier. Thanks.
Chinese Japanese war
Itwar
After they have it slide of the trailer.
The D7E is my all-time favorite crawler. I ran 47A's and 48A's for Weyerhauser in southern Oregon in the early 1980's, and still miss those machines. God, they're awesome!
Robert Lloyd Pom is
I assume they are prettier than your mistress!
47A is the direct drive , 48A is the power shift.
@@albertemanuello7471, yep!
@@robertlloyd7167 Those D7E's are built , solid dozer , 5-3/4" bore 4 cylinder turbo i got a 47A ,we rebuilt the engine and the hydraulic cylinders , put in a new radiator,, its a power house for its size and its got that sound that demands respect. i think i am. going to put a brand new undercarriage on it next year., the only thing, is if i put the the new bottom on it, it will be so pretty with those new grousers on it , i won't want to use it at all
The d7 47a and 48a caterpillar ki are successful and durable machines. I've used them for a long time. And now upgraded to d7 g
I once slid a 4WD tractor sideways into a fairly deep sheaugh(a wide open drain or watercourse) in my only defence the tyres were dammed near slick, I first attempted digging away below the upper rear tyre to no avail, she would not come back down, she just sat and gently rocked on the now securely bottomed out rear tyre, while pivoting on the front axle, now credit to David Brown's engineering of the 1980's the low oil pressure light never came on, despite the near 45 degree side ways position.
Anyway, since it was safe to run the engine, and she was bottomed out already and could go no deeper, I creedled her back and forth, putting cut branches and brash beneath the tyres each time , until at last, a few hours later, I got her out, just as a local farmer turned up.
As I started to espouse my heroic efforts in my entirely successful and unaided extraction, Boydie punctured my ego by stating;
"I would be more interested in how you put her in the sheaugh"
Which is my long-winded way of saying, thanks for the upfront "confession" as to the how the mishap happened.
Marcus
P.S.
She got new tyres the next week!
Glad everybody was safe after that and the recovery was easy to, My guess is it just flopped over on it's side slowly just like it did when they pulled it up. I've heard old guys I know well , say they've seen stuff go over like it's in slow motion on sites over the years. Guys tipped a crane in the river by here while trying to rescue a semi truck and it's load of steel coils that fell off down the bank. The guy felt it start going over and just climbed out the cab and watched it go. they had fun getting that out though as it was on a narrow road by a single tracked old country bridge. they had 2 smaller cranes that fitted down the road and used big concrete blocks to anchor them down to stop them moving during the lift.
Great slow job uprighting. Damn perfect. And thanks for the explanation as to how it was tipped over in the middle of nowhere.
Agree 100%. My first thought was "how'd you flop a dozer on its side in a flat hay field?" Thanks for explaining!
That's why I always tell guys not to stand around the trailer while loading and unloading.
From what I read this slid off the Trailer immediately after being loaded and before the Trailer was moved.. Every one I've ever seen slide has been while loading or mere seconds after, well before it could be chained down or moved.
Non-operators don't realize those grousers are like sled runners on slippery surfaces.
Almost did the same thing loading my new to me D5 hystat on I-beam ramps meant for a wider tractor. Got up the ramps ok but when it hit the breakover it tried to twist to the right. I got it corrected as it bucked forward butit was really close to just twisting off.
Stuff happens..... Liked that "soft landing". Neighbor rolled a Cat excavator unloading it and got banged up pretty good. Asphalt tracks and a slick trailer did the trick. It was a farmer who hadn't had it for very long. He won't load it anymore. He lets his son do it now. Think he may have crapped his pants. He won't admit it but son said there was a strange odor in the cab now........Great recovery and appears little damage.
Rubber mats on a steel ramps helps alot. work for me! used to hate loading !
I never did put one off the Side, but I've come so Close SO many times you might as well SAY I have. I never understood Why most operators would NOT Load or Unload their machines. Lot of men Killed that way, though, even WITH the ROPS canopy. ALWAYS wear your seat belts, Guys. I won't wear one in the truck, or a four-wheeler, but ALWAYS when Loading/unloading machines.
jim nickles 00
I like the old 4cylinder sound Over the 3406.
that 7e sounds good, piled alot of brush with both G and E back in the 1980"s
My dad ran big CAT dozer's like that for over fifty years.👍
I would like to know how it got on its side in the first place.?.?. 🤔
I love this machines.
Damn fine save! And guess the poor ole girl just needed a nap! 👍Right fine vid!!
I've had a few close calls loading and unloading machines. The point where the machine is going over center on the ramps is critical.
I turned a big Ford BAC how over on it side. Tilt trailer. Frost on everything. Hauling with bucket offer the truck. You name it Accident waiting to happen. Back tires of how got to trailer tires and I had to give it a bit of fuel. When I did it just stood up on the back tires and come down with the left front tire off of the trailer. The bucket over the dump bed held it a bit but not enough. I stood up and watched it in gold trying not to panic. And it worked. I stood up and knew it was going over to the left so I grabbed the right gender with a pretty firm squeeze and didn't let go. The how was laying on its left side and was standing on the ground two feet from the how with a still nice firm grip on that fender. It had no top on it and for me to stay and ride that out I think would have been foolish.
That must have been a butt puckerin' experience for the operator when it went over LOL
I've seen that happen a couple of times while loading or unloading. I personally had one slide off the side of the side of a red clay hill after about 3 days of rain.
These fellows knew what they are doing
Wow! The comment clowns are running wild in here! What few realize is when on a trailer, or other hard surface, how little of the track is actually in contact. What you have is a lot of weight on several small rounded cleats and they will slide. Wet wood is slick as snot and when they start to slide it happens fast. Often during or directly after loading and before chains even become part of the picture.
Thats why anything on a bed no matter if it has tires or tracks should be chained down....no matter the distance moved
get a bigger trailer moron
Nice job getting it back on its tracks ! Easy landing , didn’t just slam over
Ida still threw a stack of old tires under it just 2 b safe
Dont know if anyone gives a shit but if you are bored like me during the covid times you can stream pretty much all the latest movies and series on InstaFlixxer. I've been streaming with my girlfriend lately xD
@Mitchell Roger yea, I've been using InstaFlixxer for since november myself =)
Good job boys, hope nobody got hurt
Very gentle upright.
7888 λ
group of geezers out having a helluva day......nice
Nice work. Guy who delivered our D3 had it sitting on old rubber transport truck mud flaps
The more interesting story. How did that happen on nearly flat ground???
i rented a lot of small equipment that i've run off and on trailers. i'm wondering (and i don't know the answer) but wouldn't winching heavy equipment onto a trailer always be the safest loading technique? i've watched a ton of videos on loading equipment (for my own education) and it always appears that the machine placing power to the tracks always causes the accident where one track loses traction. winching would eliminate this risk.
As you say now, me too for educational purposes... It's a lot of a Palaver to winch everything on - BUT... for peace of mind + another attachment & securing point. It's a question of breaching a tradition.
Best dozer ever made
Very nicely done getting her back upright without a bang 👍
Never thought I'd see that
For u critical knuckleheads until you have that happen to you and experience the exact circumstances causing the incident you should be quiet and watch how they recovered and did the right thing to let it sit. The ROPS really work
As a an old and "critical knuckle head" that has done some bed work before. Please explain why the cat was not chained down to the bed when it "slipped off" the wet [or not wet] deck and landed on its side.. Best way to not have this "experience" happen to you is to avoid the experience altogether by chaining the cat down in the first place . Other than the bruised ego I am glad everyone is okay and everything is back on its feet in good shape. Have a safe trip next load gentlemen
HITNMISSNUT well what do ya know.....u r exactly the knucklhead i was refering to...no need for you to puff out your chest and show off what would do and spotlight your big ego....these fellows are aware of what went wrong and what to do right next time. Your words and mine really don't matter.....they know. So don't be a hotshot know it all idiotic loudmouth "knocklhead".....by the way...mine is bigger than yours...
tedroux yours is bigger because you use it on mules too much
@@paulchristensen2854, it wasn't chained down because they were loading it, not transporting it. Smdh.
@@tracypittman1646 Never seen one slip off a bed when loading....ever.....ice snow... no caulks....over the beaver tails. Looks pretty flat to be slipping off a bed loading. Some one made a very big mistake no matter what
Nice to see guys who know what they are doing great qjob
How did it get on its side on flat ground
How did it fall over ?.
That's a Good Chain !
Y como se volteo en lo plano?
But how did it fall over ??
How in the "Sam Hill" did it get on its side?
Gravity
Read the comments
I would have never thought about parking it in its side .
Does this hurt the grass?
Saw a man loading a tractor on a trailer with diamond plate for decking the trailer was parked with the front pointed downhill slightly after he got it on the trailer he tried to stop and it just slid to the front of the trailer ( deck was not wet ) definitely could have gone much worse.
Think from some of the detailed replies here, there is a case for making a video to show HOW it should be done properly. Level surfaces etc go wthout saying: but sometimes you have no option for recovery - OR even delivery / shedding. Everyone AND the Regulatory Authorities like to spout forth and Throw the Book AFTERWARDS, time to be more Proactive.
I would never attempt to load a steel tracked machine on a steel decked trailer. Just picture the grim reaper standing on the trailer guiding you on.
There’s a reason lowboys made for hauling dozers have oak lumber for the bed material.
How did the dozer roll
I loaded a small rubber tracked hoe today with the rain pouring down but you never know what'll happen when they squeak. I found out why skates are made of steel when trying to get rid of some ice on a road with a track loader. Never again! Live and learn. We do the best we can do but sometimes................
I like to think at 2:17 the d7e says come with with me sonny and I'll show you how it's done
Nice job.
How u lay we down on flat ground
If you'll notice as he pulls it upright, the road shoulder is very soft looks like he tried to turn uphill with one track on the road and one on the shoulder. Right track dug in and sunk... threw him off of his center of gravity. I can see it happening.
WPOG84 there is no way that cat went over from a soft shoulder. had to have went sideways off a bed.
Pillock
Nice theory. Completely wrong and uninformed, but nice.
Dozer1642 yes it is a theory and somewhat uninformed because I haven't seen anyone say what actually happened. Maybe I didn't make that clear. I meant to say that that COULD have been what happened.
As I'm guessing that you already know, most dozers will slide downhill before they tip over. But if that track wedged deep enough in the mud, it would not slide and if the angle of the dozer became steep enough it could tip over in a situation like that.
If you'll notice in the video, when the guy pulls the dozer back upright, the left track is BARELY resting on the ground at that angle which means almost all of the weight is resting on the outside edge of the right track. It could easily tip over again.
Another good example is that there are sports cars that can drift or go into a 360 degree spin at 100 mph no problem. But let him hit a small 3 in. deep pot hole and what do you think is going to happen?
So yeah I don't really know what youre trying to get at other than leaving a snarky remark. Many times, those that leave remarks like that on plausible comments like mine aren't necessarily good equipment operators. Not assuming that you aren't.... just sayin.
WPOG84 scroll up.
Read description.
I operate bulldozers for a living. There is zero chance of that dozer tipping over on that shoulder.
Have a good day.
How?
Ah that cat just wanted to take a nap
E series, is that a four cylinder engine?
Yes, 4 cylinder, Cat 339.
Cool. Weird sound. Knew it wasn't a six or eight.
That looked like a trip off the trailer the hard way. Hope everything and everybody is ok.
Operator OK.He was on it, ROPS worked. Towed into field to let fluids settle overnight. Helping friend of mine upright his dozer. No apparent damage. Rain shower came up while he was working, finished job, he loaded on trailer with wet planking, then dozer slid off after parked on flat deck. Combination of wet wood and some mud in tracks.
Thats great very dangerous wet muddy tracks and a wet trailer. Only thing worse is ice and snow. Good luck with getting it going again.
They'll do that and the old 4-banger eased it right over. I dearly love to hear the old 7-E's snort. Ran one in the Army a bunch and an 'F' afterward. Liked the 'E' a LOT better. That 'G' will be fine. A good nap and off she'll go again.
running 7E all day your be ringing
All the 7's were 4-cylinder till the 'F' series came out with a 6. The 'E's were 4 3/4 inch bore and an 8 inch stroke with turbo, 1200 r.p.m. no load if I remember right. The 'F's were a 6 cylinder like a D6-C. I've operated the E's and F's a good bit and the G's a little and what I can tell, a G is like the difference between a D6-B and a C. The F's were fast and powerful. But I still like the old slow turning E series but that's just me.
Wow, I thought that was going to be such a hard hit when it came over but it really wasn't. Not sure if you had a plan for that or just luck the blade hit first.
Como que esse trator tombou?
What are the odds? Flat land I'm guessing unloading or loading. It's kinda like tripping on a limb on a putting green.
Well you know that was done in America. If it was some foreign country, both machine would have totaled some how.
Cats make everything look easy
In 1978 I turned over a d 8 cat. The boss said, now you are a cat skinner.
Ohhhh poor D4 Good Machine.
How TF did that happen?
Tornado must have tipped it over.. or maybe a big flying magnet passed by at a high rate of speed pulling the tractor over then flying away back to the planet rallipretac. I would say it slid off a trailer.. but it's not snowing there..
Mr Sunshines lmao!!!
Couldn't have done it better myself!
Operator had no control over how it landed. After certain point gravity takes over and it does what it does.Right side was lower than left is why it had soft landing.
I've seen this condition before and it can happen again. Its called "Going belly up" No known cure for the problem... Hope that old girl keeps her tracks down for now on...
That's ok putting the d7 back on her tracks but dose she run?? or did the guy who rolled her cook the bottom end.
Dozer was left to sit in field over night. Fluids checked next day. Was back to work next day and is still running fine. Engine shut off immediately, when it slid off trailer.
My favorite dozer and log cat was the HD-16 Allis-Chalmers. It never broke down but the Cat's did. Had a Carco winch and Esco fairlead which were twice as fast as a Hyster.
I have an HD6G, and you have to have six arms to run it. 🤣😂
Have friend who has one he tells everyone why should i get new one this is the best he has I guess 25,000 acres
Such a soft landing.
That was sweet, glad they didn't try and start it, I flipped one walking a steep angle packing the dirt on the back side of a hill by a building, you have to change all fluids, or you'll be headed to the Cat Dealership for big repairs... 😉
That big ol boy in the overalls looks like he could have about flipped that machine over by himself.
On the bright side, it was an easy fix and it didn't happen on the side of a mountain.
top job nice and gential
...I was wondering how that happened until I saw the trailer...
That trailer was for the one that saved him, but yes that is how it happened.
D7s very rare in Uk well done
What did you need the other dozer for, that one biggin in the overall looks like he could have done the job himself.
I pianali vanno ricoperti di gomma rivettata per tutta là sua lunghezza, con una larghezza quanto il cingolo...ferro con ferro scivola.
How not to try to load a dozer.
Barely off idle & never even pulled the motor down. Caterpillar.
Bring me my Brown pants !
Kenapa bisa tumbang gaes
Righted it really gently
Nice!!!! ( Stuff Happens...alot!!! )
sumbuddy had a real bad day
Good
Vai ter exada sega lá adiante!!!
Destombou legal sem impacto nem um
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Someone was sleeping in the d8....😰😰😰😰😰😰😰😰😰
@brokendown63 i agree man ; people wanna give their comments without knowing the facts and my reply to them is ( opinions are like A$$holes everybody got one and most of them stink )
How could have anyone flip a caterpillar on it's side??? I have rode D8 cat dozers on 2:1slopes all day long and never flipped a dozer all the years I operated equipment..
When I saw this I knew it had to be off a trailer, then I read the description. When it was flipped over I could see how it hit the ground. My trailer has steel plate on the sides so the dozer cannot slide off. Once I saw an excavator slide off while being chained on the trailer. One side of the trailer sank in the mud and the excavator slid off at a pace a snail could outrun. It was a rainy day.
Ok ben fatto
피곤하면 잠시 누워서 쉬어 🤣 주인을 잘만나야 해 몸은 튼튼해서 일어나면 흙털고 목욕해
Somebody needs to learn how to OPERATE a crawler. (not drive)
Shit only falls off when you fuck up.
You do know thats why you are supposed to CHAIN IT DOWN?
MrWhatevauwanacallme where did you get that from? Not in the description, nor spoken of in the video. You would be surprised at the number of people who think they can move equipment like that, without securing the load, im in the business, ive seen countless dozers slung off trailers, because the driver didnt think he needed it for a short move
In going on 40 years in the forest industry here I have seen dozers, hoes and skidders slide off beds with the "it was just a small move of X# of kilometres" excuse being used as a reason. The worst a but-n-top [3800 Madill] that was loaded sideways on a bed slip off and over a bank.....that one required 2 8K winch cats and a yarder to be dismantled and moved . But-n-top down for 10 days plus repairs and plus ROPS recertification. Plus a yarder down for most of 5 shifts......Plus 8Ks....no clue what the final tally was for that little faux pas but I will guess 40K +/- Mention that around the owner and you can hear his ulcers hit full boil from the next room to this day. It gets very costly very quick when corners are cut....like not chaining things down. Be safe
MrWhatevauwanacallme no its quite common, ive seen dozens of these flip overs myself
Get out of my hay field lol
А, как умудрились его на ровном месте перевернуть? Машинист, что ли пьяный из России был?
SHIT HAPPENS
You need to learn the definition of the word upright.
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