fungus
Member
- 44
- 79
- 18
- Location
- Western North Carolina
First, I'm writing to y'all with all 10 fingers, nobody got squashed!
I don't have much room (much less level surface) back in our woods. I parked Percival in the most level place I could find, then welded hooks on two 8" I beams. I hooked these onto the rear bumper/guards and planned to use them as ramps for the shelter to slide down. The mounts on the box rails end up being about 6" wide, so it should fit on the web of the beam and act as a guide as it slides down.
I then used my backhoe to pull it back off the truck. I got about 2ft of progress, then the box slid off the wood strips and was precariously sitting off the rails of the truck.
I ended up getting my dozer involved, and since I'm alone up here I was jumping back and forth between equipment and doing my best to spot too. It was a bit of a nightmare.
What happened: the box wouldn't tilt back onto the I beams until it was halfway off (pivot point), so the beams did nothing to guide it in the beginning 6 feet of drag.
The box mounts _can_ act as guides, but ONLY if the wood strips don't shift. The wood strips are milled to go over the frame bolts/rivets, so if you get lucky the strips will stay in place because of the bolts.
If you can't top lift these boxes, it seems that the best bet is to drag them off the back the way others have done on a LEVEL SURFACE. If you can't find level, choose to drive straight uphill.
I got lucky and somehow didn't flip this thing. Having an extra pair of experienced eyes would help a lot, and keep everything clear on the sides the distance this would roll if things literally go off the rails like they did with me.
I don't have much room (much less level surface) back in our woods. I parked Percival in the most level place I could find, then welded hooks on two 8" I beams. I hooked these onto the rear bumper/guards and planned to use them as ramps for the shelter to slide down. The mounts on the box rails end up being about 6" wide, so it should fit on the web of the beam and act as a guide as it slides down.
I then used my backhoe to pull it back off the truck. I got about 2ft of progress, then the box slid off the wood strips and was precariously sitting off the rails of the truck.
I ended up getting my dozer involved, and since I'm alone up here I was jumping back and forth between equipment and doing my best to spot too. It was a bit of a nightmare.
What happened: the box wouldn't tilt back onto the I beams until it was halfway off (pivot point), so the beams did nothing to guide it in the beginning 6 feet of drag.
The box mounts _can_ act as guides, but ONLY if the wood strips don't shift. The wood strips are milled to go over the frame bolts/rivets, so if you get lucky the strips will stay in place because of the bolts.
If you can't top lift these boxes, it seems that the best bet is to drag them off the back the way others have done on a LEVEL SURFACE. If you can't find level, choose to drive straight uphill.
I got lucky and somehow didn't flip this thing. Having an extra pair of experienced eyes would help a lot, and keep everything clear on the sides the distance this would roll if things literally go off the rails like they did with me.
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