foggy1111
Elite Member
I put in another 1/2 day of stump grinding with my woods grinder. I now have ground out over 200 pine stumps in about 7-8 hours of use.
My stumps are all red pine and a few years old. The trees were mostly sheared just a few inches off the ground. The higher stumps definitely take more time. I grind mine about 6 or 8" below the ground so I can later run my disc or tiller though the area. (I run the disc first as I normally find some missed treasures).
At times my grinder will spit chips and debris up to 50 feet behind the cutting wheel - NOT a good place to watch! I don't have many rocks...but I bet a rock could go twice that far. No debris comes toward the tractor....nice!
A quick tooth inspection shows the teeth are still looking good and most have about 50% of the paint remaining.
The slip clutch is tough to set up. If....no....WHEN it slips you immediately know by the smoke. Just a little tighter (like 1/4 turn on the bolts) and I stall the engine before the slip clutch gives way. I am leaving mine set as such and hope it is protected from a shock load.
My stumps are all red pine and a few years old. The trees were mostly sheared just a few inches off the ground. The higher stumps definitely take more time. I grind mine about 6 or 8" below the ground so I can later run my disc or tiller though the area. (I run the disc first as I normally find some missed treasures).
At times my grinder will spit chips and debris up to 50 feet behind the cutting wheel - NOT a good place to watch! I don't have many rocks...but I bet a rock could go twice that far. No debris comes toward the tractor....nice!
A quick tooth inspection shows the teeth are still looking good and most have about 50% of the paint remaining.
The slip clutch is tough to set up. If....no....WHEN it slips you immediately know by the smoke. Just a little tighter (like 1/4 turn on the bolts) and I stall the engine before the slip clutch gives way. I am leaving mine set as such and hope it is protected from a shock load.