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Back-blading?

monster truck

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 13, 2008
Messages
267
Location
cali
Ive never pulled that much material on the back of the blade but back blading 5 feet or so and then continuing forward i a good way to keep the material even across your blade when your straight blading like that. It can also come in handy when working around curbs and drains and such but again I wouldnt try to pull that much material at once. I wouldnt want to get all that material on the rams and in the pins that are back there.
 

bigrus

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 13, 2009
Messages
323
Location
Southern Queensland Australia
Occupation
Joystick attendant
Ive never pulled that much material on the back of the blade but back blading 5 feet or so and then continuing forward i a good way to keep the material even across your blade when your straight blading like that. It can also come in handy when working around curbs and drains and such but again I wouldnt try to pull that much material at once. I wouldnt want to get all that material on the rams and in the pins that are back there.

Check out the operator wearing a tie (bl##dy sales rep that's why)
 

ovrszd

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2008
Messages
1,523
Location
Missouri
Occupation
Retired Army
I'm like Monster, I often backdrag material a few feet working the ends of bridges or filling potholes.

An old operator near me decided one time that he would do his entire township with his blade reversed. His idea was the roads just needed a little smoothing and no cutting. So he reversed his blade and graded 30 miles of crushed stone roadbeds. Ground the bolts and nuts right off the cutting edge fasteners. Ground the bottom edge of the moldboard off. What the H***!!!! :eek:
 

biggrader

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
222
Location
Red River Valley of the North
Occupation
Owner/Operator
I will back drag a little bit but not that much. Try not to get the gravel up past the bottom slide strips let alone the top strips. Get gravel up into there and you will be changing them sooner than later.:eek:
 

snapfruzen

Active Member
Joined
Jan 7, 2010
Messages
29
Location
Brisbane Australia
Occupation
Grader since 1976,working at a coal mine with scra
My view of this is, if it works do it. I decided years ago that neither my ego nor my grader were so fragile that they couldn't stand a little back blading. If you're really hooking into any loose material going forward it's going to spill over the top of the mold board anyway. Notice in the video that you can actually move more material in reverse because can't run away to the side as quick. Whatever is quicker and easier. Say you're running gravel between green curbs and a truckie leaves a big gap. Drag it back mate.
 

Cat is ALL

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2008
Messages
88
Location
Canada
No sales rep I've ever seen. (camo pants lol)

I can see smoothing out a small windrow or something delicate like that but not throwing gravel up into pins, and cylinders.
 

Super Roel

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 20, 2007
Messages
98
Location
The Netherlands
Back-blading .

If you work with a automatic blade control and you turn your blade then the cables to your blade sensor got stuck and you have to remove the laser of the sonic masts .
With regards , Roel .
 
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