Years Ago I was doing a lot of work on the forestry side of things, and I remember the nicer grapple skidders had “snubbers” on the 2 link pins above the rotator. When properly tightened, the grapple swinging movement was much more dampened when empty and riding over rough terrain. I could only see a benefit to them. If the Mecanil can’t go as far as the GMT clutch brake pins (TTC system which looks pretty awesome), maybe snubber pins can be used?
I’m wondering if a grapplesaw head would benefit from this in a number of ways, but mostly to slow down the dynamic movement as picks come off. This might help with:
- Long laterals with decent leverage. Perhaps they would stay a bit steadier and potentially remedy the issue of downward tilt prior to the cut being finished.
- Tallish trunk picks that really reorient during initial lift off.
- Grab & Cut scenarios where the grapple is one side or the other of the branch’s overall balance point, limiting movement exposing a climber at risk.
What do you all think?
I’m wondering if a grapplesaw head would benefit from this in a number of ways, but mostly to slow down the dynamic movement as picks come off. This might help with:
- Long laterals with decent leverage. Perhaps they would stay a bit steadier and potentially remedy the issue of downward tilt prior to the cut being finished.
- Tallish trunk picks that really reorient during initial lift off.
- Grab & Cut scenarios where the grapple is one side or the other of the branch’s overall balance point, limiting movement exposing a climber at risk.
What do you all think?










