oosik
Epic Contributor
Having owned and extensively used the Wallenstein BX42S and now the BX62S - I know for a fact that airflow is a MAJOR factor in the discharge chute plugging. The '62 is not only a bigger chipper but has substantially greater air flow. And for reasons that I do not understand - the pine pitch does not "clobber up" the chute on the '62 like it did on the '42.
The pine pitch would get so thick & gooey on the '42 that I would stop every two hours or so and douche it out with diesel fuel and a cotton mop. Otherwise it would be 15 minuets between plug ups. The answer for this problem with the plugging chute on the '42 - stack the felled trees into piles and let them sit and dry for a year.
I got the BX62S for many reasons - it would chip larger trees, higher air flow has meant the chute has never plugged and the larger tractor could easily handle the bigger chipper.
Any pine tree that survives to 6", on the butt, will not be chipped and might even make it to become a large pine - nature willing.
The pine pitch would get so thick & gooey on the '42 that I would stop every two hours or so and douche it out with diesel fuel and a cotton mop. Otherwise it would be 15 minuets between plug ups. The answer for this problem with the plugging chute on the '42 - stack the felled trees into piles and let them sit and dry for a year.
I got the BX62S for many reasons - it would chip larger trees, higher air flow has meant the chute has never plugged and the larger tractor could easily handle the bigger chipper.
Any pine tree that survives to 6", on the butt, will not be chipped and might even make it to become a large pine - nature willing.