Nice job on the radius! Do you measure as you go or just set the steps by eye?
Now the stupid questions begin:
I used the boom offset to rotate to the approximate angle needed, and I hung them a little off center from the lifting hook so that either the front or back of the block touched the ground first. Then with only part of the weight of it on the ground I could easily rotate and maneuver to the correct position by hand. I haven't worked with these before this job but they sure are quicker than natural stone that I'm used to working with.Now the stupid questions begin:
If working alone, how do you guide a block as you lower it into place?
I once had an old backhoe would settle an inch a minute. Worked nice for swivelling a stone hung from a chain. These days I use a come along.
These are light enough, you probably could fine tune position using hand tools.I used the boom offset to rotate to the approximate angle needed, and I hung them a little off center from the lifting hook so that either the front or back of the block touched the ground first. Then with only part of the weight of it on the ground I could easily rotate and maneuver to the correct position by hand. I haven't worked with these before this job but they sure are quicker than natural stone that I'm used to working with.
300 kg according to Redi-RockThese are light enough, you probably could fine tune position using hand tools.
$139.50 ea. I didn't price out natural stone. Even if it was less, the extra time spent placing them would use up any savings. The customer wanted to match the existing retaining wall also.What did those blocks cost? Cheaper than natural stone?
No pics with the new CMP bucket on, but it's working out well so far, even though I'm just using tilt and not rotate yet. Still waiting on a Rexroth dealer to tell me if I can add a section to the valve block, or if I need to use a diverter for the second auxiliary circuit.












With this one, the drum gets filled with at least 20 gallons of oil for lubrication and to add extra weight. The manual says to use down pressure to slightly lift the front tires of the skid steer. Obviously this isn't a wheeled skid steer but that tells me it's designed to be used with some down pressure. We will see.Hope you have good luck with it. Thought the same thing as you so I bought a paladin 78” model years ago. Be gentle with it. They tend to ruin the seals that hold the gear oil in the exciter tube, the problem is, when the seals go, the oil leaks on the inside of the roller drum so you have no idea it’s got a problem until the bearings burn out. I believe you want to run the unit in float so you don’t put too much weight on it.
As with most cheap attachments, it required a bit of doing to get the roller useable. Most of the hydraulic fittings were loose, but I had to extend the hoses anyway so no big deal. But it still had a massive leak from the female hydraulic coupler. I took it apart and found the reason. Guess which pieces don't belong?
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After removing the extra parts from the seal groove, it works fine.
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I used it to compact bank run sand in an old barn foundation. I dug this down about 3 feet to remove old debris that was in there, and then filled and compacted in lifts.
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I know it's not a ten wheeler, but my loaded truck didn't sink in much so it seems to have done a good job:
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Hope you have good luck with it. Thought the same thing as you so I bought a paladin 78” model years ago. Be gentle with it. They tend to ruin the seals that hold the gear oil in the exciter tube, the problem is, when the seals go, the oil leaks on the inside of the roller drum so you have no idea it’s got a problem until the bearings burn out. I believe you want to run the unit in float so you don’t put too much weight on it.