Attachment Plate LADDER

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JohnLX565

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2024
Messages
11
I am feeding the liquid protein tailings from a local brewery with the use of my skid steer and 300 gallon totes and hoses. I fill about 100 feet of various troughs with a short hose. Being AMONG the cattle has tamed them as opposed to just running it from the totes straight into the troughs ! BUT --- now that I am seen as the "food dispenser" to the cattle I get up and down from the totes quite a bit since the totes and hose has to be above the level of the trough. Had anyone ever developed a "ladder system" for the mounting plate that might "slide down" or flip down so that there is a means of climbing up and over the lift arms. Remember that the safety manual says that you aren't suppose to climb UNDER the arms and most of the time ---- the arms are low enough that it is hard to get in and out. You've got to go up and over ! I've got a few ideas but if someone has ALREADY built one --- there is no use "re-inventing the wheel"/ladder.
THanks for any plans/ideas/thoughts that you might have.
 
I am feeding the liquid protein tailings from a local brewery with the use of my skid steer and 300 gallon totes and hoses. I fill about 100 feet of various troughs with a short hose. Being AMONG the cattle has tamed them as opposed to just running it from the totes straight into the troughs ! BUT --- now that I am seen as the "food dispenser" to the cattle I get up and down from the totes quite a bit since the totes and hose has to be above the level of the trough. Had anyone ever developed a "ladder system" for the mounting plate that might "slide down" or flip down so that there is a means of climbing up and over the lift arms. Remember that the safety manual says that you aren't suppose to climb UNDER the arms and most of the time ---- the arms are low enough that it is hard to get in and out. You've got to go up and over ! I've got a few ideas but if someone has ALREADY built one --- there is no use "re-inventing the wheel"/ladder.
THanks for any plans/ideas/thoughts that you might have.
maybe you should see if you can put a electric gate valve on the outlet so you can stay in the seat and feed , if you have a electric pin connector out front that should make it even easier to hook up. thinking about it a bit more I wonder if there is a hydraulic gate valve that could work with the remotes? just a idea ,never did any of this. and yup if something let loose when you are under the arms your day would not be good.
 
maybe you should see if you can put a electric gate valve on the outlet so you can stay in the seat and feed , if you have a electric pin connector out front that should make it even easier to hook up. thinking about it a bit more I wonder if there is a hydraulic gate valve that could work with the remotes? just a idea ,never did any of this. and yup if something let loose when you are under the arms your day would not be good.
Previously I had a 3 ft spigot and with a light 3" hose on the end and would turn on the outlet valve --- and crawl in the cab and just drive past my 100 ft of trough and fill everything full in about 3 minutes. I have converted to a shorter stiffer hose, with a valve on the end so that I can walk from trough to trough AMONG the cattle on foot so that they become "more civilized" and trust someone standing among them as opposed to thinking that a machine named NEW HOLLAND feeds them. BUT I can't use a LONG hose to fill all the troughs or they will be walking all over it. So NOW, I have to fill about 3 troughs at a time, get back in the NH and move it a bit--- crawl back out-- and manhandle the hose to fill the next three----- while the bottom of the tote (and the forks) are about 3 to 4 feet off the ground.
I could drop the tote to ground level and use a gas powered pump --- but the gravity fed hose and a two legged creature seems to generate some "trust" that isn't there previously.
Not really a SKID STEER issue, just an "access/safety" issue. I guess I could lay out the $$$$ and buy a side entry JCB !!! LOL
 
Previously I had a 3 ft spigot and with a light 3" hose on the end and would turn on the outlet valve --- and crawl in the cab and just drive past my 100 ft of trough and fill everything full in about 3 minutes. I have converted to a shorter stiffer hose, with a valve on the end so that I can walk from trough to trough AMONG the cattle on foot so that they become "more civilized" and trust someone standing among them as opposed to thinking that a machine named NEW HOLLAND feeds them. BUT I can't use a LONG hose to fill all the troughs or they will be walking all over it. So NOW, I have to fill about 3 troughs at a time, get back in the NH and move it a bit--- crawl back out-- and manhandle the hose to fill the next three----- while the bottom of the tote (and the forks) are about 3 to 4 feet off the ground.
I could drop the tote to ground level and use a gas powered pump --- but the gravity fed hose and a two legged creature seems to generate some "trust" that isn't there previously.
Not really a SKID STEER issue, just an "access/safety" issue. I guess I could lay out the $$$$ and buy a side entry JCB !!! LOL
well those are nice ,very spacious cab,I agree you would look good in one
 
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