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Ripper/subsoiler

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Anyone built a small single tooth ripper/subsoiler for their Horse? I've got maybe 100 feet of sprinkler piping to add to the yard (sandy soil) and would rather not dig by hand or rent a trencher. I was thinking the GT1600 would have enough traction to pull at least a single time through the ground, hopefully up to 12" or more deep in a few passes so I could easily bury the piping. 

 

I need to to build a sleeve hitch first, then go from there. I was thinking maybe get a replacement box blade tooth from TSC and build around that. I think the most successful design is going to have a pretty shallow angle so it pulls itself into the ground without needing any additional weight, similar to a traditional moldboard plow.

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DennisThornton

I'm curious but there's no hope for me.  None for you if you have big rocks!  Oh, maybe a vibrator and some means to veer a bit this way and that around the rocks might work with small rocks.  The telephone company did pull a few hundred feet a few inches below grade but I honestly don't know how.  I can't stick a shovel in the ground without hitting a stone!  Could be 4" and could be as big as VW!  

 

Upstate NY glacial deposits!  Your mileage may vary...

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Tankman

Bare lawn, I have made a single pass with a moldboard plow and coulter blade. Bet it would be fine unless you find rocks 'n roots.

 

Forget which Horse did the earth turning but it was only an 8 hp. Front weights were a must. Learned that fast when the Horse reared up and

I lost steering. This Stallion was my earth mover!

 

 

AJ-Horse.png

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pacer

Sounds like a fun "what if??" ---but, I dont think I'd sink a bunch of money into rigging it up! To my thinking the main hold up would be - as you indicated - traction! One wheel pulling loses traction pretty quickly. Then theres the other factor, your soil composition ... but hey, give it a go:lol:

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Tankman

Never thought of it but perhaps pull a pick axe or mattock? Might work, repeated passes?

 

 

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can whlvr

what about a mold board and do a few passes

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WH nut
20 hours ago, clip said:

Anyone built a small single tooth ripper/subsoiler for their Horse? I've got maybe 100 feet of sprinkler piping to add to the yard (sandy soil) and would rather not dig by hand or rent a trencher. I was thinking the GT1600 would have enough traction to pull at least a single time through the ground, hopefully up to 12" or more deep in a few passes so I could easily bury the piping. 

 

I need to to build a sleeve hitch first, then go from there. I was thinking maybe get a replacement box blade tooth from TSC and build around that. I think the most successful design is going to have a pretty shallow angle so it pulls itself into the ground without needing any additional weight, similar to a traditional moldboard plow.

Why not get a 10in moldboard plow and roll the sod over

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squonk

single bottom 8 or 10"

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clip

I could go moldboard, but if the WH can pull that I don't see much difference in pulling a small subsoiler. I don't have either, and the subsoiler would be easier to build and tear up less yard (depending on how many times I lose traction :)). Front weights are a good idea too.

 

Im not expecting this thing to be able to dive in and cut a neat 12" deep trench right off, but if I can take it in two or three bites I think I'll be doing pretty good.

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ericj

my brother built some thing like that several years ago and used it to get a couple of inches down to bury an electrical wire  out to his shed or something like that just don't remember all of the details anymore, but the piont i want to make is it did work.  i think he just made it to fit the brindly lift, problem he had was getting it to dig in without weight add to it. 

 

 

 

 

eric j

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clip

Initially I imagined something around a 45 degree angle on the bottom, but all the factory-made ones I see have a very shallow angle, looks near 22 degrees. I imagine this would assist in pulling it down over a longer travel length.

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cheesegrader

I have a ratchetrake rip and dig attachment for a FEL

It has a single tooth that can be bolted on the underside that makes a nice trench about 4" deep.

Useful for running irrigaiton or power lines.

It does a pretty good job going thorugh small roots, but comes to a screeching halt if you hit rock.

Better than a plow, which tends to struggle with roots.  The 13" wide box keeps it from digging in too deep

The rig on the front of a loader is VERY long, and hard to maneuver, but you don't have to worry about the front end lifting up!

I like the design of the tooth.  Something similar, hung off the rear end of a slot hitch seems like it would be easy to fab.

Ratchetrake.com

 

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Don1977

Here is a couple pictures of mine. I just sawed of the foot and and changed it to get more angle. Got it welded back on but haven't tried it. Before it would only go in about 3 or 4 inches.

This was built out of scrap steel that I had.

 

SAM_0603.jpg

 

SAM_0604.jpg

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