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How to put teeth on loader bucket?

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Leroy

03-07-2001 15:01:33




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Anybody here got experience putting teeth on a loader where none have been before? Mom uses it to clean out the barn and needs some more gription.




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jessie

03-22-2001 22:37:13




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 Re: How to put teeth on loader bucket? in reply to Leroy, 03-07-2001 15:01:33  
you will have to go to your dealer and pick up the bases and weld to your bucket and then you can put the removeble teeth on your bucket.



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Stoney

03-08-2001 17:51:42




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 Re: How to put teeth on loader bucket? in reply to Leroy, 03-07-2001 15:01:33  
I put some on my manure bucket. I got some heavy 2inch channel, cut it in lengths long enough to go from rear of bucket to front plus 3 or 4 inches. On one end of the cut pieces I cut the sides down at an angle towards the front of the channel then spaced them out and bolted them on at the rear of the bucket. On the front I ran a heavy (1/4 inch?) strap under the teeth and heated and bent it up the sides of the bucket and welded it on, then drilled holes thru the bucket, teeth and strap and bolted them fast. Works pertty good, but Junkmans idea might be faster.

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dan h.

03-10-2001 21:12:03




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 Re: Re: How to put teeth on loader bucket? in reply to Stoney, 03-08-2001 17:51:42  
we used inch and a quarter square solid iron. cut it on 45 degree angle the lenth of the bucket plus the lenght of the tooth we wanted {8 inches?}. if you cut 45 angles each cut makes two ends as you go down the shaft cutting them off. {we didn't make the back of the tooth square and the front angled). then we drilled 2 bolt holes in each tooth, laid them in the bucket and ran a bolt up from the bottom with a big washer on it. if you dig hard stuff you might put a flat iron the lenght of the front instead of washers to keep the bucket from bending from having all the pressure on one or two teeth. i had that problem on an old loader i had.

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Junkman

03-08-2001 00:19:35




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 Re: How to put teeth on loader bucket? in reply to Leroy, 03-07-2001 15:01:33  
My dad bought a tooth bar for his John Deere skid steer from the dealer. It just bolts on to the bucket on each end after sliding it over the cutting edge. Don't know how much it cost him, but you may want to measure the width of your bucket and see if the local construction equipment dealer could get you one.
John



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