Uprooting a tree using a 45 to 1 pulley system

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • This is part 2 of my project to remove a back leaning tree. This tree needed to be removed in this manner. I am pouring a cement slab right where this tree was. Using a chain saw or even digging it out would not have completely removed the roots. Not removing the roots (over time) would decay and cause the ground to sink.

Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @davidminter538
    @davidminter538 7 лет назад +1016

    What is your equipment rated and what is the weakest link?

    • @YankeeDiver
      @YankeeDiver  7 лет назад +571

      I used two different types of pulleys in this video. The Orange and green snatch blocks are rated for 8 ton WLL. The smaller 5:1 double sheave block and tackle system is rated for 7500 lbs. The weak point would be the 5:1. I am only pulling a few hundred pounds through that system. I am using my Kubota tractor and estimate that I am probably sending anywhere between 200-500 lbs.
      I am using two different types of double braided nylon rope. The first is 5/8 rated for 7,800 lbs. The second is 3/4 and rated for over 12,000 lbs.

    • @kylewhite711
      @kylewhite711 7 лет назад +132

      Connor Shields that rope would break way before that chain

    • @sippe3985
      @sippe3985 7 лет назад +506

      the tree was the weakest lol

    • @PATCsawyer
      @PATCsawyer 7 лет назад +19

      What's the rating on the little gold 'biner attached to the 4:1 purple block? Is it aluminum?

    • @asgamingchannel4972
      @asgamingchannel4972 7 лет назад +70

      His hard hat

  • @GharGrihasthi
    @GharGrihasthi 4 года назад +2162

    here after destin's snatch block

    • @grahammerrick3528
      @grahammerrick3528 4 года назад +107

      SNATCH BLOCK!!

    • @jefgir
      @jefgir 4 года назад +62

      I've been obssessed with pulleys since i saw his video

    • @JamAshGoo
      @JamAshGoo 4 года назад +5

      YES!

    • @xxzombiepepperxx
      @xxzombiepepperxx 4 года назад +11

      SNATCH BLOCK FAV WORD OF THE DAY

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown 4 года назад +15

      Same. I was hoping for this to be 100% man-powered. Guess I expected too much. Still cool though.

  • @bakedutah8411
    @bakedutah8411 5 лет назад +419

    _”Give me a lever long enough, and I will yank a big-ass tree outa the ground”_ Archimedes “Bubba” McSyracuse

  • @felipevazquez123
    @felipevazquez123 Год назад +132

    Purchased this to replace a guide pulley ruclips.net/user/postUgkxO9seYZjlnuP5UvMkb7osQW3WxPVeSnPk on our John Deere x304 snowblower. As I stated in the title, it is just about perfect. The stock pulley has a spacer at the bottom. I used four washers to emulate said spacer, and it works perfectly now. Great product, and great price especially if compared to typical JD prices.

  • @Ohmz27
    @Ohmz27 4 года назад +424

    The squeeking is either some unhappy ball bearings in one of them pulleys, or the tree urgently exclaiming that it never got an an eviction notice and doesn't recognise the law of man.

    • @nedisahonkey
      @nedisahonkey 4 года назад +2

      Hilarious joke, it even caused an audible chuckle

    • @bnaditbhbf4844
      @bnaditbhbf4844 4 года назад +4

      i think it was his 5:1 tackle

    • @bnaditbhbf4844
      @bnaditbhbf4844 4 года назад

      good joke aswell

    • @mysss29
      @mysss29 4 года назад +2

      assuming there was even a ball bearing in the pulley making the sound

    • @nivlacyevips
      @nivlacyevips 4 года назад +5

      It was the first pulley in the system, the one in the background. Im guessing friction bearings not ball.

  • @lookdawg187
    @lookdawg187 4 года назад +100

    The amount of lateral force that trunk sustains while not snapping off, is amazing.

    • @Nick-rs5if
      @Nick-rs5if 2 года назад +12

      Mother nature sure is one hell of an engineer

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne Год назад +3

      @@76shogun1lateral is horizontal big booy

    • @williampmcd8548
      @williampmcd8548 Год назад

      maybe it was oak.

    • @robert9016
      @robert9016 Год назад

      @@76shogun1 Lateral ain’t up or down boi!

  • @HamSandvich
    @HamSandvich 4 года назад +1776

    Did anyone else think he was gonna pull it by hand?

    • @colinjava8447
      @colinjava8447 4 года назад +37

      My dad did it by hand using similar technique

    • @alexc7857
      @alexc7857 4 года назад +109

      @@colinjava8447 my dad is a tree

    • @colinjava8447
      @colinjava8447 4 года назад +164

      @@alexc7857 he sounds well rooted

    • @alexc7857
      @alexc7857 4 года назад +24

      @@colinjava8447 not anymore after you killed him, he's now probably been hung, drawn a quartered and cremated on someone's fireplace

    • @superque4
      @superque4 4 года назад +60

      @@alexc7857 ...but thankfully his seed lives on!

  • @croyce7699
    @croyce7699 7 лет назад +3108

    I'll be honest, I was kind of disappointed when he fired up the engine to pull that trunk. I was half expecting him to just pull a rope by hand or something

    • @SkankRemix3
      @SkankRemix3 7 лет назад +214

      Maybe if it was 300:1 lol

    • @JamesSmith-nv3mb
      @JamesSmith-nv3mb 7 лет назад +286

      8v-of-fury id be down to watch a video
      of 300:1....

    • @TheGrateWall
      @TheGrateWall 7 лет назад +24

      croyce same!

    • @potc420
      @potc420 7 лет назад +69

      croyce you would need a pulley system a hell of a lot bigger than 45:1 if that was the case. Or a hell of a lot smaller tree.

    • @moosehunter76
      @moosehunter76 7 лет назад +181

      Or one hell of a bigger man.

  • @metocvideo
    @metocvideo 4 года назад +99

    Very impressive, the ropes you used must be very strong. I had some education at military school in the 1960’s, about blocks, tackle, multiplied force etc, with regard to moving cargo and supplies on ships. The man who taught all this was an ex WWII navy commander, and he warned us about making sure that the breaking strain of cables was not exceeded. To illustrate this, he recounted how, on another ship, a mis-calculation had led to a cable breaking while lifting a heavy load, and the whiplash of the broken end cut a sailor clean in half.

    • @tac6044
      @tac6044 2 года назад +13

      That is a fable that is used very often

    • @marvthedog1972
      @marvthedog1972 2 года назад +9

      @@tac6044 maybe but a very real possibility to happen.

    • @eamonnmckeown6770
      @eamonnmckeown6770 2 года назад +5

      I think steel cables are supposed to be the most problematic and ropes generally advised for amateur stuff.

    • @Hyperlooper
      @Hyperlooper 2 года назад +17

      @@tac6044 as engineers say: the regulations are written in blood

    • @kerry9125
      @kerry9125 Год назад +5

      That sailor's name was Herbie Robinson. They fed his lower half to a shark and put a life preserver on the rest of him, and tossed him overboard. He bobbed around for days until some dude named Quint found him...

  • @DaniotheManio5
    @DaniotheManio5 4 года назад +625

    Guy must have watched SmarterEveryDay.

  • @citizen116
    @citizen116 7 лет назад +312

    Scott,,I read all of the reply’s. It amasses me at the number of people that will watch a man perform a work of his choosing,,get the results he anticipated and yet condemn him for NOT performing the work by their method of choice. Unbelievable!! Congrats on a job well done. I was intrigued and entertained. Thanks for the video!

    • @YankeeDiver
      @YankeeDiver  7 лет назад +18

      I know right. Thank you for taking the time by actually reading through the comments. I am glad you like it.

    • @stevet5379
      @stevet5379 6 лет назад +14

      While i've never been amassed by anything, what you described does amaze me.. ;) .....and I agree, there are experts in every computer chair that have never so much as put in a hard days work to accomplish anything but feel qualified to criticize everything they feel that they are an "expert" on. I've done rigging on heavy pull military wreckers and heavy civilian tow trucks and have also been in the position to teach heavy rigging and his multiple rigging was spot on from what I could tell!!

    • @sociallyacceptable2497
      @sociallyacceptable2497 5 лет назад +5

      worry about your own comment.

    • @kensendelofski3761
      @kensendelofski3761 5 лет назад +1

      it was informative. I enjoyed the video. actually it was impressive. I expected the comments to be what they are. I gave it a thumbs up. also gave your comment a thumbs up.

    • @Corn0nTheCobb
      @Corn0nTheCobb 5 лет назад +13

      @@sociallyacceptable2497 You're a dick

  • @ericdowner5589
    @ericdowner5589 4 года назад +111

    Hello 911, I was sitting in my kitchen when a red block and tackle with 6' of chain came through my front door, down the hall, hit the TV and landed out on my back deck.

    • @anthonycook8703
      @anthonycook8703 4 года назад +3

      im still larfin

    • @chriswrenne1269
      @chriswrenne1269 4 года назад +1

      That was like a high tuned banjo ready to explode.

    • @markmueller9196
      @markmueller9196 4 года назад +3

      Paramedics respond to find two legs sticking out of the ground beneath the now upright tree.

    • @socialrealty8850
      @socialrealty8850 3 года назад +1

      😂😂😂

  • @Daniel-cl6hj
    @Daniel-cl6hj 3 года назад +29

    “Let’s see what happens”
    Spoken like a true man

  • @puppy_pause
    @puppy_pause 4 года назад +154

    Looks like a “Final destination” moment waiting to happen.

  • @terrencemahanna6418
    @terrencemahanna6418 5 лет назад +64

    Bravo! Work smart, not hard. Looks like it was fun to engineer.
    I know from experience that flooding the area with water will make your job go faster. You also end up pulling up less dirt.

    • @bigrig4385
      @bigrig4385 2 года назад +3

      Brilliant tid-bit I hadn't thought of, thanks for pointing that out.

  • @jerroldnadler1688
    @jerroldnadler1688 4 года назад +154

    Makes you really appreciate how strong those orcs in Lord of the Rings must have been....

    • @calvinf9218
      @calvinf9218 3 года назад +6

      Well I suppose if they hooked the rope on higher up on the tree, they'd get a long enough moment arm that a couple orcs could pull it down more easily.

    • @joshuatolodxi179
      @joshuatolodxi179 2 года назад +3

      Someone give this man an award, he wins all the internets! 🥇🏆🎊🌐🍾🥳

  • @AlMai222
    @AlMai222 4 года назад +656

    Why am I watching this, I don’t even own a tree

  • @treeassassin8042
    @treeassassin8042 5 лет назад +92

    Sir, I'm a professional arborist. My chainsaw and I thought your method of tree felling was epic. Great video and incredible use of mechanical advantage.

    • @shoulders-of-giants
      @shoulders-of-giants 5 лет назад +1

      If you were a professional arborist, you would never use a chainsaw.
      If you are going to make a narcissistic reply to this comment, spare your time.
      You'll continue your bullshit anyways.

    • @GameVilleofficialpage
      @GameVilleofficialpage 5 лет назад +15

      巨人の肩 you clearly have no idea what you are talking about. Arborism not only include toppling and uprooting trees but also trimming them. On top of that, while this approach was very smart doing the same for another 100 trees is inefficient. You also need to realize that what he was doing there was not narcissistic but rather simply explaining to everyone else that his opinion would be valued as he does do stuff like this for a living. Brush up on basic terminology or get the hell out of the comments.

    • @michaelmorrison4201
      @michaelmorrison4201 5 лет назад +3

      Sir, I'm a dyslexic. My messed up reading and I thought you said you were a "professional ABORTIONIST" who uses a chainsaw at first. That was a pretty epic/crazy thought that flashed in my head initially. After rereading what you wrote multiple times to figure out what you really said, I was both relieved and somewhat disappointed when i realized my mistake. Haha

    • @ClintsTractor
      @ClintsTractor 4 года назад +7

      @@GameVilleofficialpage The most sensible reply to an idiotic comment I've seen in a long time...

    • @djtblizzle
      @djtblizzle 4 года назад +1

      Anyone else notice the stick laying at the trees 4’oclock never moved an inch??? Lol!

  • @tstuff
    @tstuff 5 лет назад +67

    Lots of ropes and pulleys. Love it. The only thing you could have added to make it better would be more cowbell.

  • @ShelbyDude1
    @ShelbyDude1 5 лет назад +26

    An excellent example of mechanical advantage. This old woodsman agrees about removing those roods. Thanks for the nice video. It was very enjoyable, Scott.

  • @Cubeazza
    @Cubeazza 7 лет назад +100

    What an amazing show of how pulleys can be used

  • @Sibbe2560
    @Sibbe2560 4 года назад +51

    When the tree finally gave up he was at least 60 miles from home...😜😜

  • @quartytypo
    @quartytypo 5 лет назад +628

    That works until you meet a tree that has a 45-1 root system.

    • @craiglittleworm5003
      @craiglittleworm5003 5 лет назад +9

      Yeah that's a good one.

    • @prm414
      @prm414 5 лет назад +7

      But if he added 2 more pulleys , what would that make it 90:1??

    • @mulligan706
      @mulligan706 5 лет назад +9

      Why are you going to pornhub to watch men masterbate. There's an insane amount of women that put on a show that is much more pleasing to look at. I mean I guess an argument claiming that to be an assumption wouldn't necessarily be false,. On the grounds that I have never watched another dude tug one out, but I'm not a gambling man I and I'm about 99% sure that I'd be willing to bet every dollar I made from now to grave that Im I right about that one. Different strokes for different folks I guess.

    • @lskiller1903
      @lskiller1903 5 лет назад

      @@billbelzek6748 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @lskiller1903
      @lskiller1903 5 лет назад +1

      WILLY B, You know you JACK-IT-SON !! Jackson.!!

  • @buildthings79
    @buildthings79 7 лет назад +209

    I have done this same thing about 15 times before.
    1. Get an extension ladder and go as high as you can go in the tree.
    2. Chain a 12,000 lb snatch block for cables to the tree at that point.
    3. dig a small trench around the base of the tree and turn a hose on a slow drip for about a week.
    4. Go to Harbor freight and get at least an 8000lb or more winch. maybe a 12, 000 lb if you have the coupon.
    5. Strap the winch to the base of another tree in the direction you want it to fall.
    6 . jumper cables to a truck or tractor to run the winch.
    Soaking the ground will greatly reduce the tonnage needed to pull the tree down and reduce the risk of the trunk exploding under the strain. Ever notice how trees just seem to blow over in storms especially when its been raining.
    This will also leave most of the dirt on the ground and just pull the roots through the mud.
    I get it why you want pull the stump out too. I had dig footers for a garage and five large trees where in the way. The stumps needed to go.

    • @buildthings79
      @buildthings79 7 лет назад +34

      fuzzy wuzzy What the fuck is your problem?

    • @MMAteenager
      @MMAteenager 7 лет назад +12

      fuzzy wuzzy you were an accident child that was never wanted or loved I'm guessing?

    • @oqsy
      @oqsy 7 лет назад +8

      fuzzy wuzzy has 2 public videos. You know what to do.

    • @seanclements6206
      @seanclements6206 7 лет назад +4

      hahahahahha fuzzy wuzzy is a bitch

    • @Bit01
      @Bit01 7 лет назад +3

      fuzzy wuzzy Would you need a 12,000lb snatch block for that?

  • @cvf628
    @cvf628 4 года назад +292

    I rooted for the guy but fell for the tree.

    • @colinjava8447
      @colinjava8447 4 года назад +6

      You're bark-ing mad

    • @mevales1681
      @mevales1681 4 года назад +2

      Get this man a beer!

    • @DB-bc1tg
      @DB-bc1tg 4 года назад +4

      I leveraged my bet by voting for both sides, but I agree this really pulled at my heartstrings.

    • @razordu30
      @razordu30 4 года назад

      It’s okay, the guy rooted the tree so it’s all even.

    • @Ziltoid_Knows
      @Ziltoid_Knows 4 года назад

      Your dad joke game is off the charts!! I envy you sir 👍

  • @dazedapparition7845
    @dazedapparition7845 7 лет назад +668

    very impressive but I have to point out that I used that very setup on my mother in law and it did not work.

    • @theepicamerican1620
      @theepicamerican1620 7 лет назад +32

      You either need more pulleys, or more power. If that doesn't work, place one of her grandchildren outside.

    • @MovieMuscle
      @MovieMuscle 7 лет назад +7

      That comment was very impressive.

    • @littlegoobie
      @littlegoobie 6 лет назад +6

      did you try pouring epsom salts in all the holes?

    • @obfuscated3090
      @obfuscated3090 6 лет назад +5

      MILs are supposed to be disassembled to move. See whaling videos for examples of tools and procedures used. You've my encouragement to practice on my MIL, as nothing of value would be lost.

    • @183charlesspiva
      @183charlesspiva 6 лет назад +1

      Them in law trees got some damn big roots!!!

  • @coachmarc2002
    @coachmarc2002 7 лет назад +832

    I can use this system for some of the weeds in my yard. thanks

    • @YankeeDiver
      @YankeeDiver  7 лет назад +30

      Those must be some really big and strong weeds.

    • @zavatone
      @zavatone 7 лет назад +5

      Crabgrass roots, I suspect? I would call a dentist t come and root canal it first.

    • @donfillenworth1721
      @donfillenworth1721 7 лет назад +41

      Impressive. I thought the rope would break.

    • @snoopdogie187
      @snoopdogie187 7 лет назад +5

      Yep, we get some of those weeds in NJ also. What a pain they can be.

    • @HB-ps6rn
      @HB-ps6rn 7 лет назад +1

      The solution to those weeds is 2,4-D given they aren't grasses

  • @wesfrazier5739
    @wesfrazier5739 4 года назад +4

    When I saw 45 to 1 I thought WOW this guy is gonna pull it down by hand! Very cool

  • @Yonkage
    @Yonkage 7 лет назад +170

    Archimedes once said: "Give me a long enough lever and a place to stand, and I will move the Earth."
    This guy responded: "Give me enough pulleys and a place to string them, and I will do the same."

    • @vidblogger12
      @vidblogger12 5 лет назад +8

      @C Sp
      -Biggus Dickus*

    • @thestrangerthattalks9516
      @thestrangerthattalks9516 5 лет назад

      @@vidblogger12 I know that reference
      But I cant seem to remember where I heard that

    • @bemusedalligator
      @bemusedalligator 5 лет назад

      monty python. You can get to the clip on youtube from there.

    • @Henrix1998
      @Henrix1998 5 лет назад +1

      Weeeell, the lever would need to be 5.97*10^24 kg / 80kg times longer on the Archimedes side than on the Earth's side. For example 1m for the Earth, 7.46*10^22 m on his side. For reference, that is 75 times the diameter of Milky Way. This all is ignoring the fact that we need something to put the lever on and some external source of force in the first place

    • @435now
      @435now 5 лет назад +3

      Give me a stump grinder and i'll be done in an hour

  • @maeran1
    @maeran1 5 лет назад +25

    The tension was killing me...and the tree! Entertainment value rating 45:1 !

    • @sisyphus645
      @sisyphus645 3 года назад

      The tension also killed the tree..literally

  • @MrStatic101
    @MrStatic101 3 года назад +14

    Came for the snatch blocks stayed for the excellent use of PPE. Stay safe!!

  • @NoferTrunions
    @NoferTrunions 6 лет назад +12

    I've sort of done this myself: Pressure Washing (13hp, 4000psi) the roots and then pulling tree over. Worked on 80 ft Eastern Spruce. But the trick was: softening the soil with water. (You could have done this while rigging all those pulleys!)
    Each day, I washed away dirt until the hole filled up with water. The next day the water would be gone, resume, blast, make bigger hold, fill with water, REPEAT next day. I think I had a 2x hooked to my 3/4 ton truck and as I was blasting (my neighbor came over and was watching, said, "It's going..." and it leaned over and uprooted.
    On trick I use is a follow force: half way along rope, hang a big log. With truck parked, log is 20 ft off ground so when tree starts to go, the log keeps the force on the tree for a fair range of motion.
    I have a big leaner (95 ft Eastern Spruce) to do but I can let it go where it wants so is PERFECT for the pressure washer!

    • @mekanik911
      @mekanik911 Год назад

      Damn Nofer, you wasted enough water to flush 1000 toilets. And not the water saving kind. lol

    • @NoferTrunions
      @NoferTrunions Год назад

      @@mekanik911 The water went back into the ground from which it came. None was wasted.

  • @Rob-rs5rn
    @Rob-rs5rn 5 лет назад +213

    This is basically what my dentist had to do to get my left wisdom tooth out.

    • @skylane807
      @skylane807 5 лет назад +11

      "What the hell are you laughing at" just got shouted to me from the far side of the house.

    • @carlfritz9496
      @carlfritz9496 5 лет назад +7

      @@skylane807 If I rolled on the floor laughing at Rob's joke with nobody there to hear me, did I really make a sound?

    • @thewatcher.8194
      @thewatcher.8194 5 лет назад +1

      @@carlfritz9496 God RUclips is getting ever more existential daily

    • @gpl211212
      @gpl211212 5 лет назад

      hilarious

    • @leavesofdistinction1679
      @leavesofdistinction1679 5 лет назад

      Same here, Rob. I think the pulley system would have saved time on mine, though!

  • @freedomfighter-1776
    @freedomfighter-1776 3 года назад +6

    Never ceases to amaze me how tough some of things can be in nature. I tried removing a larger butterfly bush with a 4 ton come along...got to the point I couldn't crank down anymore...didn't budge. I'll have to try a pully system like yours but simpler...it's not nearly as big as this.

    • @JosephE-yd6ks
      @JosephE-yd6ks 2 года назад +2

      Do you have to uproot it? I'd cut it down low and put a few poison dowels into it. Best way to uproot it with a digger is to dig the soil around it and break the big roots one by one. If you go straight to the stump you're not gonna budge it.

  • @bananamanasaur
    @bananamanasaur 7 лет назад +619

    I was rooting for the tree

    • @ekinebobmanuel4551
      @ekinebobmanuel4551 7 лет назад +27

      I see what you did there

    • @mlg6992
      @mlg6992 5 лет назад +17

      I see you dug up the ol box of dad jokes for that one

    • @viracocha03
      @viracocha03 5 лет назад +1

      Hahahaha

    • @edhernandez4344
      @edhernandez4344 5 лет назад +7

      Lol i knew this comment would have a "i see what you did there" response

    • @peaceforgaelandscot
      @peaceforgaelandscot 5 лет назад +27

      You should branch out into comedy.

  • @AAHKLEE
    @AAHKLEE 5 лет назад +6

    My Old Grandad taught me this principle 60 years ago. He used the term "Block and Tackle" Worked then, works now! Great video, really enjoyed, Thank you.

    • @thewatcher.8194
      @thewatcher.8194 5 лет назад

      I'm going to go along with the guy who said why am I even watching this, I have no interest in tree uprooting whatsoever, I guess I got up to take a leak and idly turned the tv on to watch the news ...somehow I found this video of nothing happening ,but lots of wires or ropes and ..... I was thinking I need to get back to bed when my wife said what are you doing ..from the bedroom and I found I couldn't bring myself to say I'm watching a tree being uprooted and risk a few seconds silence then are you crazy, thinking how can I answer that honestly

  • @nwg8847
    @nwg8847 Год назад +1

    the best example of work smarter and not harder i have ever seen 👍🏼

  • @MrDavidelliottjr
    @MrDavidelliottjr 5 лет назад +46

    I pulled a sunken boat on the bank for some people with a similar system in the spillway. Guy amd his wife sunk there surface drive in 42 degree weather. I'm glad I lived out there and was taking a ride. Seen them in the bank with all there things floating. I went got a few snatch blocks and a 3/8s cable I had. Put the snatch blocks on the tree and one in the boat and back to the tree to dead head it. Sucked it right out the water on to the bank. Let the water out the boat. Pulled his plugs and bowl on the carb. Got it all cleaned up with break cleaner and back together. Started right up. Pulled it back in the water and escorted them back to the landing since they where both a lil drunk amd freezing. But all in all this system works wonders.

    • @prestonransome5362
      @prestonransome5362 5 лет назад +3

      Whoa. Bet you were blindfolded too. Bet those people are still asking, Who the heck was that? Amazing!

    • @1111pianoman
      @1111pianoman 5 лет назад +1

      nothing like good ol' 'break' cleaner...

    • @thewatcher.8194
      @thewatcher.8194 5 лет назад

      First sensible and to be applauded answer I have seen, so far... I only have another 1.2 million comments to read, only joking, good answer

    • @TripAMD
      @TripAMD 5 лет назад +1

      Right on brother! Kick ass story!

    • @ffuukkyootoobffuukkyootoob1411
      @ffuukkyootoobffuukkyootoob1411 5 лет назад

      Drunks and boats. Now there's an episode of Rescue 911 waiting to happen.

  • @darrallipke8070
    @darrallipke8070 5 лет назад +6

    A good illustration of the strength of force multipliers. Cool video!

  • @jeffclarkofclarklesparkle3103
    @jeffclarkofclarklesparkle3103 5 лет назад +3

    Wow...you should show this whole setup in step by step detail. Amazing!!!

  • @robertsutphen2333
    @robertsutphen2333 6 лет назад +18

    Pretty cool. I was a Line Foreman for the power company and before that a Tree clearance Foreman. Sets of of 4&4s and 3&3s with proper size snatch blocks and rope and a decent truck and you can conquer a lot of problems . It’s nice to see someone with patience and no know . I dearly miss building power lines and storm recovery work. Great video. Carry ON !

    • @keepingitreel...8037
      @keepingitreel...8037 5 лет назад +1

      Now we only need a method to avoid any pully re-adjustments.
      That's just me being impatient, but great job!
      I can't even imagine how long it would've taken to dig it out with a primitive spade shovel. . . : )

    • @billbelzek6748
      @billbelzek6748 5 лет назад +1

      Never met anyone who "misses" storm recovery work --- you must be an adrenaline junkie

    • @johnnyo3220
      @johnnyo3220 5 лет назад

      Were you the line foreman when the Camp Fire broke out in Paradise, CA?

  • @davebloggs
    @davebloggs 5 лет назад +17

    I just think someone was having way to much fun playing with ropes and pulleys :-)

  • @richmac918
    @richmac918 2 года назад +1

    Nice demonstration on the how pulleys can be used to increase mechanical advantage. I was questioning why you would spend so much time doing this when it would have been so much quicker to cut and and grind the stump and then I read your comment. I agree, not getting it all out would have come back to haunt you 5 or 10 years down the line so good choice and nice pulley demo.

    • @miguelcastaneda7257
      @miguelcastaneda7257 2 года назад

      Burn it out cut to ground as low as possible make a ring around stump with stones or metal pour charcoal briquettes few bags light and let go its a slow burn usually lasts a full day...everything's gone

  • @markseattle8968
    @markseattle8968 5 лет назад +7

    Nice demonstration of mechanical advantage. I'm surprised that you ignored the easiest leverage of all--Just tie to the tree as high as possible! I've removed large cottonwood stumps by leaving 30 feet of trunk and tie high on that with a single chain hand winch (rated to 3,000 lbs). With the larger ones, it comes out much easier if you take an axe and cut off the lateral roots to deny the tree of its own leverage. Fun example though. Always be careful when putting heavy tension on rope (or cable, or chain) so it doesn't break at a weak point and send deadly things flying to kill you. Thanks for posting this.

  • @budokai100mph
    @budokai100mph 5 лет назад +6

    That is some serious mechanical strength you created. Most these commenters have probably never tried to rip a tree out of the ground with a 20k lbs. Machine and had the machine lift off the ground. I have have so I fully understand what you just created here. Enough force to pull a house off a foundation. Well done!

    • @johnnyllooddte3415
      @johnnyllooddte3415 5 лет назад +2

      no i do it with a 5 lb chainsaw or 10,000 lb bulldozer.. both are 1000 times safer and faster than this stupid dangerous setup..
      doc johnny

  • @kemosabesan4266
    @kemosabesan4266 3 года назад

    Never ceases to amaze me how many applications the wheel has. Probably one of the best basic inventions of man haha

  • @Mylitla
    @Mylitla 7 лет назад +586

    Physics teacher or Engineer? I'm going to guess teacher because an Engineer would have designed in a 5x safety factor that management would have reduced to 1.5x while cutting the budget and imposing an unrealistic deadline.

    • @YankeeDiver
      @YankeeDiver  7 лет назад +103

      LOL Close readneck.

    • @kutzbill
      @kutzbill 7 лет назад +69

      So funny, especially since I am an engineer.
      I was working on a project, and I had kind of the annoying habit of keeping things simple.
      Our head engineer designed some "portable" units to house a Diesel Generator control room enclosures that called for fabricated I-beams and fabricated, welded channel iron on the side.
      I looked it over and asked why we just didn't use the 40 foot long shipping containers. They were almost the exact same size as the designed units. We got 1 to try and it worked perfect. saved about 400 man hours on each unit.
      Another time the same engineer was showing us all how brilliant he was. He designed a control room set up that was 72 feet long, and 28 feet wide, solid welded single enclosure.
      I asked how he was going to ship it. He got this really disgusted look on his face and walked out, casting doubt on my parents ever being married.
      He really was a smart guy, but he tended to over-engineer almost everything.
      Smiles!

    • @CHOPPEDK181
      @CHOPPEDK181 7 лет назад +2

      Mylitla Ugh... unfortunate but so true. good laugh anyhow!

    • @waynerobinson2301
      @waynerobinson2301 7 лет назад +5

      kutzbill this is very cool . I have believed since 1980 that no engineer should work on blueprints details . I saw engineers call out fillet welds on inside of boxed column . In other words where it is not possible to get to from ground to top elevation where the strengthening was to be done on every column up to about 100 ft then new iron up above. It isn't a big deal but shows lack of field time . There is one of these guys on a tv program always visiting jobs he is so funny . But obviously some of you guys have good brains .

    • @headcheesefry
      @headcheesefry 7 лет назад +3

      One down, thirty-eight to go.

  • @DouglasKubler
    @DouglasKubler 7 лет назад +14

    I've done similar work ( to have a tree land exactly) but in between adjusting the pulleys I'd lock the tree in the current position with a solid chain to an anchor so you don't waste any time retracing the rebound.

    • @dtrrtd774
      @dtrrtd774 7 лет назад +1

      Or put a basket on top and make an awesome catapult.

    • @DouglasKubler
      @DouglasKubler 7 лет назад

      Eventually the roots and soil give way and the tree silently disappears. :-)

    • @Tyan_Nahts
      @Tyan_Nahts 6 лет назад

      I could be wrong but there appears to be a prusik "sling" in use running below the red pulley and anchored to the chain that was capturing the progress. Once he starts pulling again you can see the load shift from the prusik to the line.

  • @JustinDOehlke
    @JustinDOehlke 3 месяца назад

    And to think of how tornadoes and hurricanes blow trees over like matches. That kind of power is outrageous.
    Nice work here.

  • @darkcornholio
    @darkcornholio 5 лет назад +348

    Would've been funny if the other two trees came up

    • @evanislost
      @evanislost 5 лет назад +17

      The tree being pulled gets like 80% of the way, a pulley fails and it immediately flops backwards, completely flattening the shed.
      That'd be some looney toons shit.

    • @patrickshelley09
      @patrickshelley09 5 лет назад +21

      @@evanislost Looney Toons would be the tree snapping back and flinging the tractor over to the next town as this guy yells Yaaah-hoo-hoo-hoo-hooey.

    • @coldblackice
      @coldblackice 5 лет назад +4

      @@patrickshelley09 Nailed it.

    • @zetacon4
      @zetacon4 5 лет назад +1

      I think the more appropriate adjective would be "colossal". And, especially as way too many laws of physics would have to be "uprooted" for that possibility to be effected.

    • @stevenmitchellsweeperguy7637
      @stevenmitchellsweeperguy7637 5 лет назад +3

      I can't believe knotted rope would handle that load

  • @jamesbuchanan8577
    @jamesbuchanan8577 7 лет назад +387

    a thousand years from now when scientist dig up your home and see you uprooted a tree, they will say you used ancient alien technology that can't be replicated...

    • @jacquesblaque7728
      @jacquesblaque7728 6 лет назад +7

      Not quite, really. The "scientist" part has absolutely nothing to do with whackos like Giorgio or von Daniken. Facts are quite irrelevant to cartoonists like them.

    • @lunafahey4922
      @lunafahey4922 6 лет назад +3

      James Buchanan 😂

    • @andersgranlund3276
      @andersgranlund3276 6 лет назад

      James Buchanan

    • @sociallyacceptable2497
      @sociallyacceptable2497 5 лет назад +2

      this is a ancient .

    • @CNC-Guru
      @CNC-Guru 5 лет назад +1

      Omg dude u made my day xD

  • @obi-wan-shinobi1967
    @obi-wan-shinobi1967 4 года назад +20

    I was waiting for that tree to snap for so long i forgot to look at the ground to see it being uprooted

  • @stevehood444
    @stevehood444 5 лет назад +30

    I’m really scared that RUclips knew I’d enjoy this!

  • @jimevans1809
    @jimevans1809 7 лет назад +430

    What's that squeaking? Those are the shrieks of the now homeless Keebler Elves.

    • @seanclements6206
      @seanclements6206 7 лет назад +2

      Yoshio Tamiya hahahahahahhahahahaahahahahhahahahahahahahahahhahau

    • @VadymZakrevskyy
      @VadymZakrevskyy 7 лет назад +5

      Although, I am sure, some unbelievers would blame it on the innocent purple pulley, just because the sound of squealing was significantly quieter when the pulley was behind the stump.

    • @varkokonyi
      @varkokonyi 7 лет назад +1

      Yeah, sounds like a dead bearing

    • @AverageReviewsYT
      @AverageReviewsYT 7 лет назад +1

      + yoshio tamiya... Omg... Lol those poor elves

    • @bassblair11
      @bassblair11 7 лет назад +1

      Yoshio Tamiya it's because the ride wasn't aligned going into the purple pulley

  • @NeoGeek1983
    @NeoGeek1983 4 года назад +24

    Love it. Well done. Three suggestions for next time.
    1) wet the ground around the root system, it'll free up the roots more easily.
    2) Get the ladder out and get that chain farther up the tree to be pulled out! I'd argue that you actually have a bit more that 45:1 due to the lever advantages of low trunk position vs higher trunk position as you have it, but there's a good be of improvement that could be realized.
    3) Use the proper rope(a "core blue" "bull rope"), or mention the rope you used has a high enough tensile strength(bonus for indicating what strength is needed), so no one gets hurt trying to repeat your process snapping cheap ropes and getting smacked. Personal experience: when a rope fails in situations like this they will be at high enough speeds to slice thru your skin like butter.
    But again, well done sir. Enjoyed the video.

    • @jacksondegruiter9591
      @jacksondegruiter9591 4 года назад +2

      NeoGeek83 if you go too high up the tree there’s a chance it would shatter

    • @MrGaryGG48
      @MrGaryGG48 4 года назад +5

      My grandfather worked for 50 years in the logging camps in northern Washington and in Alaska, starting about 1920. He ran the donkey engines and a lot of other heavy equipment. When he started in the woods they used draft horses, then steam engines and a lot of steel cables and chain. He told me about how dangerous it was on those jobs, when a choker-setter didn't get out of the way fast enough and one of those cables snapped, it went through the brush like a modern-day weed eater. Brush, small trees, and anyone who hadn't moved a safe distance back was done for!! He was one of the very few retirees with all of his arms, legs, and fingers when he retired.
      In the early days that was one of the most dangerous jobs anywhere, and in spite of modern improvements, it still is very dangerous.

    • @NeoGeek83
      @NeoGeek83 4 года назад

      @@jacksondegruiter9591 True, however while the chance it'll shatter does increase with it going up farther, the reduction in the force needed to pull the tree over is greatly reduced the farther up you go, gaining lever advantage. In my experience, trees that don't have cavities are extremely strong when pulled like that, and the weakest point is usually the equipment (ropes, cables, chains, etc) and not the tree. If there are cavities, that does change things and sheering off the tree is a real concern at that point.

    • @numbereightyseven
      @numbereightyseven 4 года назад +1

      @@jacksondegruiter9591 After the first effort in the vid, we have learnt that the ground starts lifting pretty-much immediately, therefore, or and, no bending in the trunk.

    • @jakeallen4512
      @jakeallen4512 4 года назад

      Another “expert “ lol

  • @mmd195401
    @mmd195401 Год назад +4

    Did you ever calculate how much tension your last rope was under? Also, I noticed that the third pull the green pulley that we see center screen moving to the left had been removed, or was completely off screen. Makes sense because on the 3rd pull you might not have needed the 45:1 ratio since most of the tree was out by then and the hard work was already done. Very nice, and is very appealing to us guys who appreciate stuff like this!

  • @williamdenham8018
    @williamdenham8018 4 года назад +9

    Great job with over 3M views. It would be nice to have a followup video that details the rigging with a few pointers and some dos-donts. Kinda hard to visual although most of us know it is a compound pulley system. It makes for great instruction to helps others since we know it works and was done without any mishaps.

  • @GlenMacDonald
    @GlenMacDonald 4 года назад +97

    I was disappointed because I didn't learn a damn thing about pulleys, other than that they work.

    • @Matt-bb5kw
      @Matt-bb5kw 4 года назад +14

      Smarter every day just did a video on them fwiw

    • @brianwallum4101
      @brianwallum4101 4 года назад +1

      Search Block and tackle or, 5 to 1 (5:1) pulley ratio explained. The concepts have been around for thousands of years.

    • @shanebat3363
      @shanebat3363 3 года назад

      Did anyone else think he was gonna pull it by hand?

  • @bradvine4564
    @bradvine4564 4 года назад +5

    I enjoyed watching that but I can't escape contemplating the choices that led me to this point

    • @rawr6306
      @rawr6306 4 года назад

      Brad Vine Ditto!!!

    • @goodnough1
      @goodnough1 4 года назад +1

      Probably $$$$

  • @schlazz
    @schlazz 4 года назад +3

    Preventing the ground from sinking by creating a huge hole. Brilliant!

    • @Dookie_burner
      @Dookie_burner 2 года назад

      Or just cut the damn tree at ground level and burn the stump . No big ass hole to deal with

  • @ticdelarue
    @ticdelarue 5 лет назад +4

    "What the hell is that squeaking noise" At first I thought it was the soul of the tree crying out, "Save Me" but I do believe it was one of the pulley axels in your setup that needed a drop of oil.

    • @urano4810
      @urano4810 4 года назад

      I thought it sounded like a bird crying cause he got evicted

  • @WellsFirewood
    @WellsFirewood 6 лет назад +101

    Very well executed, I think everyone is making fun of the video because there not smart enough to figure out how to rig up a system like that

    • @jimyoung9262
      @jimyoung9262 6 лет назад +13

      *they're not smart enough

    • @scottwillis5434
      @scottwillis5434 6 лет назад +3

      I see it more as bored people finding a straight line...

    • @mattquick5045
      @mattquick5045 5 лет назад +4

      Who is making fun of this? This is awesome and I'm not even into mechanical stuff!

    • @moto6ixmoto83
      @moto6ixmoto83 5 лет назад +2

      It’s not hard to rig up if you understand the basics of levers and pulleys. The hardest part would be to find places to rig your snatch blocks

    • @gator5566
      @gator5566 5 лет назад +2

      Block and tackle aint that hard to figure out

  • @deosiewilson732
    @deosiewilson732 2 года назад

    I was expecting him to winch it by hand....... But those ropes held up brilliantly..... Very clever system

  • @bigl6322
    @bigl6322 4 года назад +13

    I bought an acre in Hawaii. My junk trees grow out of rock, where I can’t get heavy equip....
    Snatch blocks, pulleys, come-along.....physics rocks!!... (and this 60 yr old doesn’t get hurt...... well, as much....)

    • @bigl6322
      @bigl6322 4 года назад

      Leigh Jordan HPP actually lol.... I was in eden roc, then I moved to hinalo st in Leilani, then pele pushed me to kopua farm lots until I found this overgrown acre ..

  • @jpfaff777
    @jpfaff777 4 года назад +5

    This guy is wild!! Had my safety squints on the whole time! Great content 🍻😎👍

  • @brunoks6951
    @brunoks6951 4 года назад +10

    - "Dude, can you fell?"
    - "Fell what?"
    - "THE TENSION!!"

  • @bananapudding3051
    @bananapudding3051 7 лет назад +15

    cool video brother. sometimes you just do things not because it's the best or most efficient way its because it's the fun way or to see if you can !!!

  • @ImWreck
    @ImWreck 7 лет назад +1527

    Why am I watching this. I have no interest in uprooting trees.

    • @Engineer9736
      @Engineer9736 7 лет назад +21

      ImWreck Why do you click on it and even bother commenting if you don't care about the subject. You just like it to be a smartass.

    • @ImWreck
      @ImWreck 7 лет назад +41

      Why do people agree with me. How strongly do you feel about uprooting trees? It must be very otherwise you wouldn't have commented.

    • @domobrah2671
      @domobrah2671 7 лет назад +105

      Excuse me, but some of us in the tree uprooting community take offense to comments like this.

    • @AlanWattResistance
      @AlanWattResistance 7 лет назад +27

      Make like a tree, and leave!

    • @eerkhoorndiederik
      @eerkhoorndiederik 7 лет назад +15

      ImWreck I should be sleeping...

  • @adamgladfelter8762
    @adamgladfelter8762 3 года назад

    Wow. I really felt like I shouldn't have been standing right there. Great video. Now I see why you wore the head protection. But eyes man!

  • @Waffle_cones
    @Waffle_cones 4 года назад +17

    At about 7:46 I realized that I was tilting my phone to the left trying to help them pull that tree up.

  • @trobin-zm8wb
    @trobin-zm8wb 4 года назад +6

    This man actually just pulled out an alive strong tree with a lawnmower using a pully

  • @scottgreaves8569
    @scottgreaves8569 Год назад

    Hahaha! This is awesome because this is exactly the sort of thing I love! For years in my workplace (transmission line work) I have been a great proponent of the use of mechanical advantage utilising ropes and blocks, performing all manner of miracles from vehicle recovery to conductor stringing, recovery and transfer etc., to the amazement of the younger members of the crew. Good to see I have some kindred spirits out there! 👍👍👍

    • @chevy4x466
      @chevy4x466 6 месяцев назад

      I just worry about the rope snapping

  • @maddoxinc1642
    @maddoxinc1642 7 лет назад +14

    So if you have enough time and pulleys, you can uproot a tree. Wouldn't leaving the canopy on the tree help shift the weight and force the tree to fall?

    • @alexpearson8481
      @alexpearson8481 3 года назад

      Yeah I thought this as well. You could even haul additional weight into the canopy of the tree to help with that effort.

  • @rooftopvoter3015
    @rooftopvoter3015 3 года назад +8

    Backstory: This is a retake. The first video showed all the anchor point trees being uprooted and the target tree stood its ground.

  • @bashpr0mpt719
    @bashpr0mpt719 4 года назад +33

    Should have used more blocks and done it by hand like Archimedes.

  • @bruzote
    @bruzote 5 лет назад +15

    I think it went slower because of that dandelion in the front of the soil clump. Those are always tough to pull out! ;-D

    • @olafberserker5830
      @olafberserker5830 5 лет назад

      Cheese and Rice I think I Pulled something laughing at this comment, I like the cut of your jib!

    • @davemwangi05
      @davemwangi05 5 лет назад

      guys don't marry a woman who loves physics, this is what my wife did to my dick when I cheated on him.

  • @y.e.8494
    @y.e.8494 4 года назад +1

    The sound of snapping tree roots sound like they'd make one heck of an ASMR therapy session!🤪

  • @blackcoppermaran2524
    @blackcoppermaran2524 4 года назад +4

    And that is how the Griswold’s got their Christmas tree after Russ forgot the chainsaw. 👏 👏 👏

    • @truthhurts837
      @truthhurts837 4 года назад +1

      Yeah right. Of course Russ forgot it.

  • @patrickhowerton1121
    @patrickhowerton1121 6 лет назад +13

    Put a section of a larger tree at the base as a fulcrum point and it will get the roots for the other side.. I did and it saved lots of time and digging becsuse it popped the base right out of the ground..

    • @buggsy5
      @buggsy5 5 лет назад

      Or he may have just continued readjusting the rope lengths and continued pulling. Most of the heavy pulling was done by the time the tree was horizontal.

  • @Rhifan01
    @Rhifan01 4 года назад

    That was impossible! ......and, yet......??!!?!? You, sir, are Genius AND Impressive. Well done!!!

  • @GillBearToe
    @GillBearToe 4 года назад +19

    Yes, it's pretty neat how pulleys work but it still doesn't explain the lump on my testicle.

    • @ryantexada9269
      @ryantexada9269 4 года назад

      You should probably go get that checked out

  • @davidbdoucette
    @davidbdoucette 5 лет назад +11

    Great video! Fun to watch the forces at work.
    I could be wrong, but my math comes up to 28 to 1. 4 x 2 x 3 + 4. If the lowest anchor on the removed tree would have been attached to the shackle on the green pulley closest to the removed tree, it would have been 36 to 1. 4 x 3 x 3. I am saying 4 to 1 for the purple connection, because it looks like a double sheave pulley, so 4 lines and 4 times the input force from the tractor. If you had a double sheave pulley back by the tractor and had the tail end of the rope come back to the purple double pulley and connected to the caribiner/quick link, for a total of 5 lines, then it would have been 5 to 1 at that point in the system.
    Again, great video showing mechanical advantage at work. :-)

    • @shawntheartist4984
      @shawntheartist4984 2 года назад +5

      Do you expect anyone to read all of that?

    • @Spahi77
      @Spahi77 2 года назад +6

      @@shawntheartist4984 I did...I am trying to figure this stuff out, think it's cool to know.

  • @chucksummerlin6694
    @chucksummerlin6694 3 года назад

    Glad it didn’t drag the building with it 😂. Cool method. Looks like something I would piecemeal together and tryout 👍

  • @johnossi4234
    @johnossi4234 5 лет назад +9

    A diagram of the pulleys, ropes and anchor trees would be really cool

  • @TR4zest
    @TR4zest 7 лет назад +12

    Having seen that we can lose a lot of trees after long periods of heavy rain that saturates the ground, followed by very high winds, it is clear that saturated soil gives less support to trees. It might have been easier to pull the stump if you had poked a few holes around the stump and let a hose run for a couple of days to soak in. Great job anyway. Though you still have a fair few roots to cut.

  • @michaeldougfir9807
    @michaeldougfir9807 3 года назад

    I used to be a bo'son mate on a seagoing tug. And I have been an arborist since the '80s. So I wish I were there to help compact this rig.
    The mass of roots and dirt that came up is called a root ball.
    I read a lot of comments before someone shared my thought: soaking the root area would have made this a lot easier. Just watch the current hurricane news. Many of those trees fell much easier because of the soaked root zones.
    And I enjoyed the funny comments too.

  • @GetUrPhil
    @GetUrPhil 4 года назад +15

    I wish that you had shown us what you did for tie off when readjusting.

    • @bigcountry5520
      @bigcountry5520 4 года назад

      it's quite simple after you use a pulley to its max, it has to be run out and reset. you'll notice he had to slack off and re-adjust.

    • @GetUrPhil
      @GetUrPhil 4 года назад +1

      @@bigcountry5520 i noticed he readjusted multiple times but figured there is still tension in the lines.

  • @ofcv1238
    @ofcv1238 4 года назад +8

    It seems to me that you have merely shifted problems. You went from a 20’ tree stump to a 2 metric ton root ball.

  • @sweetkellymay
    @sweetkellymay 5 лет назад

    Over 2,000,000 views, basically watching paint dry..Good job Scott..

  • @erkme73
    @erkme73 5 лет назад +8

    Arborist charge to remove tree and grind away the stump: $400.
    Pulleys, cables, and chains to DIY: $600.
    Satisfaction of a job well done: Priceless

  • @harrison298
    @harrison298 3 года назад

    This makes you appreciate the insane power of hydraulic logging equipment

  • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
    @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork 7 лет назад +48

    awesome... but I'd be concerned about a rope braking and that last pulley wiping my head clean off... lol
    nice engineering though!

    • @GuitarSlinger2112
      @GuitarSlinger2112 7 лет назад +4

      when you set up a pull think about line tension and not what you're pulling. he had four lines at the load (the tree) that look close to an inch in diameter. There are half inch lines out there that can handle 20k working load. Every time you run a line through a snatch block you're reducing the line tension. It's pretty fascinating stuff.

    • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
      @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork 7 лет назад +1

      yep... that makes sense... my "tension logic" wasn't functioning correctly. Thanks for correcting it. :)

    • @AAAyyyGGG
      @AAAyyyGGG 7 лет назад +2

      Nice point but we can't see what he's hiding behind while it's being winched!!

    • @scottwillis5434
      @scottwillis5434 6 лет назад +1

      Good idea to think about it and take appropriate precautions! Notice that while all those lines are under tension, subject to whipping if something breaks: his (expendable) camera was there but his (harder to replace) body was not...

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 5 лет назад

      You may be the bra-king, but the word is breaking.

  • @ekimoboy
    @ekimoboy 6 лет назад +5

    A strangely addictive video to watch. Amazing. Ashamed to admit I actually thought he was gonna pull it be hand to start with lol

    • @micheller8014
      @micheller8014 5 лет назад

      elbee myself included....I wonder what ratio you would need to achieve to do this by hand?

  • @dustonc1
    @dustonc1 4 года назад

    We all thought chainsaws were more practical, but now it's been empirically tested. Cheers!

  • @SiegePerilousEsauMaltomite
    @SiegePerilousEsauMaltomite 4 года назад +10

    “See, I told ya yer grill would be fine without moving it”

    • @Aatell764
      @Aatell764 3 года назад +1

      When you're right you're right

  • @mannycalavera121
    @mannycalavera121 7 лет назад +325

    can move the earth with a big enough lever

    • @zavatone
      @zavatone 7 лет назад

      But this is with a block and tackle.

    • @nickname9422
      @nickname9422 7 лет назад +6

      Then tie higher on the tree.

    • @kingmike40
      @kingmike40 7 лет назад +6

      I guess we can use that if an asteroid is on a collusion course with earth. When the asteroid is past we move the earth back. Of course there is a chance of freezing or boiling to death or being hit by something else.

    • @sneakapeek2577
      @sneakapeek2577 7 лет назад

      awesome!

    • @andrewwheeler6550
      @andrewwheeler6550 7 лет назад +6

      And a place to put the giant fulcrum!

  • @moondawg3693
    @moondawg3693 5 лет назад

    WOW !!! I haven't stressed out like this from watching a RUclips video in a long time, or more likely ever.
    I was waiting for that pully directly behind you, to break loose and then the credits to start rolling, with condolences from your friends and family.
    If ever a job called for 3/8's or 5/8's steel cable, it's this one, at least on the rig right behind you.

  • @i.b.deplorable
    @i.b.deplorable 4 года назад +3

    Nice video. Thanks for posting it.
    By the way, I could only count 20 to 1 pulley system. Perhaps I couldn't see it all.
    Would someone please post a line-drawing of the pulley system, to show where the 45 to 1 comes from? Thanks.

    • @kennycurran6938
      @kennycurran6938 4 года назад +2

      I too would like to see a drawing, for maybe I too, can not see all the ropes in play. I understand he is saying he has a simple 3 on a simple 3 (which equals a compound 9:1, then a simple 5 hauling on the 9 for a total of a 45:1 compound system. I took what I could see and drew out "Tension Method", just being curious and I come up with 35:1
      Cool video demonstrating the lost art of one class of simple machines in action.

  • @GaryTugan
    @GaryTugan 4 года назад +3

    cool vid. I'm curious as to why you placed the chains / ropes on the tree so low, versus taking (mechanical) advantage of the lever principle, and placing them MUCH higher in that tree...?

    • @Ryanpant8
      @Ryanpant8 3 года назад

      Same thought, he did a great job, but with some leverage it would have came over much easier.

    • @rtos
      @rtos 3 года назад +3

      He wanted to pull out the roots as well (in description). Placing it higher may have only snapped the trunk.

  • @jonathangehman4005
    @jonathangehman4005 3 года назад

    Soak the area around the stump with a hose overnight and you might have been able to just grab the rope and take off walking. Pulled some stumps like this with snatchblocks and a garden tractor after soaking and they always gave up without much of a fight. It's ever so satisfying.