View attachment 206285
Anyone know what this is?
Thanks for your help
It's not exactly the same, but it does look a bit similar to the 'claw hooks' we used to use to hold bales of wool together when they were loaded onto the back of trucks.... But I never saw any that had both blunt hooks like those in the middle of your pictured device
AND sharp hooks or claws like the outer two in your pic?? Maybe what you've got there is a combination of the two different types of 'claw hooks' we used to help secure loads onto semi-trailers & trucks?? :dontknow:
IIRC, we had two different types of 'claw hooks', one with hooks very similar to the two 'blunt' claws in the middle of your device - their claws hooked around the tie-down rail on the tray of the truck, with ropes/chains attached thru the bolted on bow part which were then cinched/tensioned tight to hold the stacked bales onto the tray; while the other 'claw hooks' we had sported a number of those sharper claws (often 3 or 4) which hooked
into the hessian bales, with ropes/chains attached thru the bow part and then cinched tight either to hold the bales tight against their stacked neighbours, or their ropes/chains were attached to one of the tray hooks on the other end and cinched tight thereto help to hold the entire stack of bales onto the tray....
The 'claw hooks' I'm familiar with were also used in a similar way to secure bales of hay, back when the hay bales weren't massive plastic wrapped 'dinosaur eggs' or dirty great bales that weighed hundreds of kgs each & required a pretty hefty tractor to move! :shocked: . The hay bales
I used to toss around only weighed 50-70kgs or so, certainly never more than 100kgs, and we used to load & stack them onto the trucks by hand!! (They were heavy bales, but still a lot nicer to load than the 25kg bags of just made/still hot @ about 80°C cement that used to spew down the conveyor out of the manufacturing plant at a rate 'just a bit faster than one a second' that I used to load!! Missing one of them, or worse, breaking one open as you grabbed it/swung it into place in the stack was far worse than just 'a right pain!' :banghead: I'm sure I invented some new cus words when that happened; but you couldn't stop, cos the next bag was there already, and the 500 odd following bags for that trailer! :yikes: ).
But I don't ever recall seeing any of the 'claw hooks' we used that had both the sharp claws to sink into the wool or hay bales
AND the blunt hooks that hooked around the tubular tie-down rails on the sides of the truck trays included in the one device, altho I see no reason for that not to happen :dontknow: It might even make securing the load easier, cos you'd never end up needing just one more to tie it all down, and find you only had one of the wrong type left!! Been there, done that, more'n once, and the wrong type of hooks DIDN'T work in the other capacity!! :cus: Trying to use them in the wrong way invariably ended up with bales of some type spread all over the road!! I only did
that once, and luckily, the bales that I lost didn't end up landing on a nearby car, or anything but the road :2thumbs: but I know others who weren't so lucky! :shocked:
Anyhow, like I said, they look 'a bit similar', but who knows?! :dontknow: