I think you're pushing the edge of capabilities power wise IMHO. I have the woodland mills 8" chipper and run it on a 55HP turbo with a nominal 44HP at the PTO. I can put 4-5" doug fir through it and it does decently well green, dry I need to turn the infeed speed down a bit. Dry hardwood like ash IDK.. more like 4" before I have to slow things down. The hydraulic infeed is nice for being able to control the speed. But with a tractor chipper you're not winning any speed contests I don't thing. Really handy for smaller cleanup jobs but not really industrial speed.
You're kind of pushing into the territory where a dedicated machine in the 12" range might be a better fit. I'd look hard at shopping used and see if you can find one that fits your size needs better than the tractor I think if it was me.
I mostly got the larger infeed to avoid having to trim limbs and less for the capacity though. Most things over about 3-4" end up in the firewood pile.
I'd second the comment about green fir and pine needles clogging it up and the sap build up being a bit of a problem (I think pine might be even worse for sap than fir...). I've had decent luck letting the piles age for 2-3 months then chipping them, not so much that they're "dry" but dry enough the needles blow off better and the sap isn't quite so resinous. I think that's true with most chippers to some degreee, the industrial sized ones seem to maybe clear a little better but even with them green conifer is a bit sticky.
You're kind of pushing into the territory where a dedicated machine in the 12" range might be a better fit. I'd look hard at shopping used and see if you can find one that fits your size needs better than the tractor I think if it was me.
I mostly got the larger infeed to avoid having to trim limbs and less for the capacity though. Most things over about 3-4" end up in the firewood pile.
I'd second the comment about green fir and pine needles clogging it up and the sap build up being a bit of a problem (I think pine might be even worse for sap than fir...). I've had decent luck letting the piles age for 2-3 months then chipping them, not so much that they're "dry" but dry enough the needles blow off better and the sap isn't quite so resinous. I think that's true with most chippers to some degreee, the industrial sized ones seem to maybe clear a little better but even with them green conifer is a bit sticky.