-
Forum
-
Antique Caterpillar Machinery Owners Club
-
DISCUSSION
-
ROPS D4
ROPS D4
Less
More
-
Posts: 176
-
Thank you received: 28
-
2 years 11 months ago #233704
by Elton
I have my D4 ready to hit the woods. My 1956 D4 7U 36219 doesn't have any king of roll over protection. I am sure there are correct names for these items, today it would be a ROPS. Was anything offered "back in the day" so to speak. How about a forestry cage with the hoops covered with heavy gauge wire? Some kind of protection from dead fall limbs would be needed, heavier for roll over would be better. Suggestions are welcome. I am in Virginia.
Elton
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 2777
-
Thank you received: 77
-
2 years 11 months ago #233710
by dpendzic
I rebuilt my D4 canopy using the canopy in the parts book as a guide--i still had the 4 posts that i reused and built a new roof--but it is just a canopy and not a ROPS
D2, D3, D4, D6, 941B, Cat 15
Hancock Ma and Moriches NY
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 6115
-
Thank you received: 999
-
-
Less
More
-
Posts: 2
-
Thank you received: 0
-
Less
More
-
Posts: 6904
-
Thank you received: 663
-
2 years 11 months ago #233715
by neil
One great approach I saw that didn't take off in the safety world was the addition of "spikes" on all four corners of a canopy. It was very effective and avoided the need for one that could support the weight of the machine. It worked simply by those spikes digging in as the machine rolled and stopped the roll from proceeding past 90 degrees. I think one reason they didn't take off is that, on say a 75hp tractor, the spikes were about 2' long and looked a bit goofy. But they worked and I personally saw one do the job intended. I've seen a lot of videos on the web of those utv things rolling and bouncing down the hills; if the canopy was taller with these spikes, it would turn a lot of those rollovers into just a tip-over
Cheers,
Neil
Pittsford, NY
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 83
-
Thank you received: 24
-
2 years 11 months ago #233725
by crookedwrench
Here is a canopy with homemade sweeps on my D4D. Wire mesh painted black helps with vision for the operator
The following user(s) said Thank You:
juiceman
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 1821
-
Thank you received: 324
-
2 years 11 months ago #233733
by Ray54
Don't put to much trust in any of the pictured canopies. A true ROPS would be attached to the frame not the fenders. The ROPS must support the whole weight of the tractor plus the impact as bounces down the mountain.
I have 3 canopies built like those pictured, before you start throwing things at me. I did a lot of weed abatement in old walnut orchards. They where to protect my head from limbs, worked very well. I had landowners say things like "I am so glad you have a ROPS, the last guy did not". I would just smile and nod. It was some steep ground by any standards, but crawlers had been working it for years by the time I came along.
The worst was the dirt had been moving down hill for years, so a lot more exposed rocks. Quartering up hill, top track on a rock as big as the D6, bottom track on soft shale. I way faster than saying it bottom track has spun a revulsion or 2 digging a deep whole. All of a sudden I have oil puck out the crankcase breather.
And speaking of sliding on a hillside, don't kid yourself there is no time to jump. I have been 5 to 10 feet down the hill before I knew I was sliding.
If you do build a full on ROPS, don't forget the seat belt. And then you need to have buckled at the time you need it. My neck is way to stiff anymore to watch what is happening behind me to be buckled down on the seat.
The following user(s) said Thank You:
edb
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 6
-
Thank you received: 1
-
Less
More
-
Posts: 485
-
Thank you received: 120
-
2 years 11 months ago - 2 years 11 months ago #233741
by willwingo
This is my 7U with overhead protection. The vertical sections and rounded over the top are 2" solid stock rolled at Struthers Wells fab shop in Titusville, PA in the 1960's.This canopy survived a trip off of a low bed at about 50 mph - only the sheet metal on the left rear corner was bent. When I added the canopy to this tractor, I made 4 45* angle brackets to the transmission case and the underside of the fender. The vertical posts go completely through the fender.
A friend was unloading a 9U D6 with a shop made canopy when it slipped sideways and rolled onto the canopy. The fender on the left side rolled under and it sort of pinned him - did not kill him.
I only consider this roof as overhead protection - limbs and things like that and rear protection from the winch operations.
Last edit: 2 years 11 months ago by
willwingo.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 1281
-
Thank you received: 236
-
2 years 11 months ago #233753
by d2gary
Just to be clear it would be virtually impossible to put a ROPS on a machine of that age however a canopy to keep rain and wayward branches of is fairly easy.
The d4d is my favorite machine and crookedwrench has a really good looking tractor but when it comes down to it the 3/8 thick fenders will fold up like a bad card table if the machine goes upside down (no offense crookedwrench your machine is beautiful)
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
-
Forum
-
Antique Caterpillar Machinery Owners Club
-
DISCUSSION
-
ROPS D4
Time to create page: 0.188 seconds