Grapple handling?

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I have broke so many chains it's not funny. I have some bigger chains that shouldn't ever break on timber but they are so heavy I can't stand to use them much. I have also broke cable, I don't think they carry as much power as chain. They will still kill and maim but I figure there is a reason they use cable on tow trucks and oil rigs. I refuse to use rope on a tree pulling it over. That stretch can be bad voodoo and they break more often than chain.
 
I have an 8K winch on my S-10, and an 8K on my Jeep Unlimited. At the start of a grapple load (top of pile) I choke 3 - 5 logs and pull them about 1/2 way off the pile. Cut rounds from those that stick out. When my feet begin to feel cluttered, out comes the tractor & splitter. When the splits start flying, the Mrs starts stacking. Repeat as necessary.

Good luck with a garden tractor for pulling. I've had 20 foot oak logs with knots that hung up on the pile and drug my Jeep across the lawn with it parked & locked in 4 lo.

My grapple loads are placed between a couple of large trees. When the pile gets down low, the bending over becomes an issue as well as nicking the dirt with the saw. I put a tree strap in a tree 8 foot up, attach a winch pully & use the winch to hoist the log partially off the ground. Nothing better than cutting at waist level.
 
Just buck those suckers where they lay.
No sense moving that crap more than necessary.
 
I broke a 1" nylon rope while pulling a tree over with a bulldozer. Boy was I glad for the cage on the rear of that dozer which was of course put there for just this reason but still, that rope slammed into the dozer like a missle and it was loud!

I pull with heavy chains and have never broken one. I would like to think that they are the best thing to have break on you.
I have broken 3/8" chains with my Mahindra 5035. But they fly under the tractor, not near me, as I am well above the chain in the operator's position. I have also broken a 20,000lb rated tow strap. That is more scary! Nylon stores more energy than steel.