CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
Skidding cone for logs
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS
CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS

PCA-1290

CÔNE DE DÉBUSQUAGE POUR BILLOTS

Prix régulier€160,00
/
Frais d'expédition calculés lors du passage à la caisse.

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Le cône de débusquage est un outil indispensable pour les opérations de récolte de bois à petite échelle. Il empêche les billots de se coincer dans les racines, les souches et autres obstacles. Son nez de forme elliptique lui donne une solidité à toute épreuve et lui permet de glisser le long des arbres résiduels, évitant ainsi les blessures à la régénération. Fait de plastique polymère haute-performance, il est léger, flexible et pratiquement incassable.

Sa grande ouverture peut recevoir un tronc de 50 cm de diamètre, ou plusieurs petites tiges groupées. La friction au sol est réduite considérablement, ce qui permet de tirer des charges plus imposantes. Il peut être utilisé avec un treuil portable, derrière un véhicule tout terrain, une motoneige, un petit tracteur et même un cheval, et ce en toute saison puisqu’il résiste à des températures jusqu’à -30°C.

Le cône est un incontournable pour tirer des billots avec un treuil cabestan! Utilisez-le avec nos étrangleurs pour une meilleure performance.

Vous pourriez aussi être intéressé par notre Kit de cône de débusquage (PCA-1290-K)

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Poids: 5,1 kg

Dimensions:  67 cm x 64 cm

Diamètre: 50,8 cm

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Customer Reviews

Based on 37 reviews
76%
(28)
11%
(4)
5%
(2)
5%
(2)
3%
(1)
R
Robert Peterson
Works as described

I have been able to skid out heavy logs with an ATV using the cone and a log chain, I'm talking about logs you could not move manually or lift without a peavy or other log jack. They slid out easily, stayed clean, and did not tear up the ground. This thing is very tough, shows only minor scratches. Can also snub a bunch of smaller diameter logs together and pull them out easily in one go - no snagging.

J
Jeff Capron
Worked good for a short time

This worked really well for about 20 logs and then there was a hole in it suddenly. Was hoping it would be tougher.

M
Motocross rules!
Heavy Guage plastic. Looks tough

Exactly what I was expecting

S
SJC
Awesome for moving timber from valleys

I have a narrow path with a steep valley on each side (old strip mine). I have lots of dead timber (mostly ash), some still standing. This cone allows me to fell the tree and pull 12 foot logs from the valley onto the path. I tie a bowline knot to the front guard of my UTV, run the rope through a snatch ring, connected to a tree saver via soft shackle (live tree on opposite side of path to the log I'm pulling), then run the rope through the skidding cone and tie another bowline to the loop of a steel chocker cable which surrounds the log. The cone makes an impossible task possible. If you can't get the cone under the front of the log, it generally seats itself as it is being pulled, as long as the knot holding the log does not get caught in the skidding cone hole - it has to be able to slide through to pull the log up into the cone. I love this thing and I'm surprised I have not cracked the plastic given the beating I've given it.

B
Brinn
Great idea, could use some improvement

The cone is tough, and did a great job pulling over rocks.The nose hole is 2.5" x 1.5", and the depth of the cone is about 25". The opening can handle 20" logs as advertised.Bottom line: I don't regret the purchase and I plan to abuse it some more.Things I didn't think about before buying:- In my neck of the woods, it is not uncommon to climb on 45-55 degree slopes, and even steeper angles on the road cut/fill slopes. Typically it is easier to fell a tree on the uphill side of the road and drag down. This cone has no way to secure it to the log/choker, so when pulling downhill (and nose-diving hard into a road) the cone just slides down the rope doesn't help at all.- If you use a rope choker, you want this cone to stay "snug" on the log to protect the choker from abrasion while skidding. I tied a drop loop in my choker, and used a large carabiner in order to both choke the log and prevent the cone from sliding up past the carabiner while I was pulling downhill. That was a fun knot to loosen up! I'm sure I can do better, but haven't put thought into it yet.- The cone isn't heavy, but it is bulky. Hauling it up a hill is a pita. I often tie a rope to an uphill stump/tree to aid in climbing from the road and up/down a steep berm. I grab rope with one hand while holding a chainsaw/cable/winch/line with the other. Remember those 45-55 degree slopes? It sure would be nice to have an easy way to backpack this cone. As it was, I put a large carabiner inside it and used another rope to pull it up behind me like a bell. Worked well enough and no big deal. Certainly easier than a saw.If the cone came with some mechanism like a built-in self-locking pulley to keep it snug on the log/choker, it would net 5 stars from me. Maybe a prussik knot with a fat rope would do the trick. Hmm...

Reviews in Other Languages

A
Andreas Adelgoß
Sehr gut

Sehr gut

A
Amazon Kunde
Holzhaube

Diese Haube ist super, vorallem bei schweren Bäumen. Würde ich weiter empfehlen.

S
Simon lapierre
Juste le cône

Attention vous recevrez juste le cône de debusquage il n’y a pas de kit forestier ni de treuil 😡