I want to file a protest...RdFx types in three lines and the rest of us have to write dissertations. :eek: That's just plain cheatin :evil:
The easy answer first; 8 too 10 feet of 3/16 welded link chain give or take. I come off of the trap with a swivel, short length of chain, swivel, 8 or so feet of drag chain attached to the grapple with a 3/4 too 7/8 inch lock washer with the split tacked welded for good measure. The heavy chain keeps the drag on the ground and the points digging in. Unless, that is you have tangle with something that has either horns, antlers or proportioally long ears and resembles RdFx in its behavior
I forge points with a 3 pound hammer, coal forge and 50 pound anvil not neccesarily in that order. I' ll have to take a couple of PICs to show you how I made the forge, bending jig and finished grapple.
The first order of business is to heat the tips of the round stock (I prefer 1/2 for yotes and cats but 3/8s will do in cover especially if you go too the long side on the chain). The first 3 or so inches, of one end of the 30 inch length, must be red hot but not "rotten". To draw the point whackem flat turn 90 degrees and whackem again. Keep the steel hot don't try to work it when it cools. I draw a 3 or so inch long point and "sharpen" it with a series of precise light hammer falls. I try to have the first 8 or so inches of the rod fairly hot when I "sharpen" the point...I can then form the hook and offset with out further heating (which too often damages the fine point).
To form the hook and offset I have a bending jig which I fashioned out of a piece of 2 inch diameter pipe. I weld a 1/2 link of chain onto the side of the pipe, insert the formed, sharpened and heated point into the link, wrap (bend) the rod around the pipe to form the hook and lift the end to make the offset. After the first point cools I start on the other end.
Once both hooks are complete, I measure and center punch mark the mid point of the rod, heat about an eight inch section centered on my mark, bend the rod in half on the mark and hammer form the eye. Before I hammer the shank tight (when forming the eye), I slip on the lock washer and if needed twist the hooks to achieve proper alignment. The shank is clamped in a vise and finished with a weld to secure the shank sides to each other.
I weld each tip of a "V", fashioned from a 6 inch length of 3/4 inch strap to the approximate apex of each grapple bend. This plow is also offset, such that when the primary drag point is digging in the "unwelded" corner of the plow attached to the opposite (up point bend) also digs in. In this manner the two points work against (kick) each other into the ground making two distinct and drag marks. In loose soil the "V" catches soil and forms a plow ridge.
PICs to follow.
Hope this helps some.