Captain Dirty
Platinum Member
Tomtint - holding on to anything I feed into my chipper, while its chipping, is definitely ill advised. Yes - vibration can/will hurt. The bark on a pine tree is just like the surface of a potato grater. I use to hang on to the tree as it fed into my Wallys. Then I realized a couple of things. I really don't need to hold on to the tree. The Wally will pull it in and chip it just fine without my help. Holding on to the tree hurt my hand/wrist and it only took one four hour session to have my new leather gloves completely ruined. The vibration and the simple act of just holding on to the tree completely ate the palm out of my right hand glove. So ..... I ended up with a new pair of leather gloves - left hand glove is pretty good, right hand glove has a hole where the palm use to be.
Besides - once the tree starts chipping - it's time to head back to the "tree pile" and get another.
That is one of the reasons I wear only gauntlet style gloves or drivers' gloves without a wrist-cinching strap. If a twig, fork, knot, or even rough bark catches on a hole, loose seam, or even a reinforcing pad, a glove is a better thing to lose than a body part.