3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience

   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #1  

TJP440

Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2007
Messages
34
Tractor
Kubota b3200 & GR 2120
Several months back I started a post on 3pt wood chippers. I thought it would be beneficial to others to post my thoughts and experience with both the above units. They were both run on the Same B3200 with 23 HP at the PTO.
They both have good points, one had really bad ones. So read on and choose for yourself ;)

Woodmax WM-8H
The bad:
I spent as much time repairing /working on it as I did chipping.

Their service after the sale is horrendous.

Reaching any one by phone for support was impossible

I even tried the investment group that just bought them in May? worse results i n that there was NO response

It's MANDATORY to Write a service request and wait, you might get a response in 24-72 hours.

There were MULTIPLE manufacturing issues with the unit, some minor but time consuming to find, others more significant.

I offered to take another unit due to the numerous defects but they declined

I was told, it is made in China and the quality can be a roll of the dice 🙄 NICE!!!

Only two blades and they WTH in a hurry. They said the wood was dirty or had nails in it . 💩💩💩🚽

The feed control handle VERY POORLY placed

Constantly had issues keeping the driveshaft horizontal angularity within the recommended range.
Manual / instructions poorly executed

The Good:
Runs great on 23 PTO HP

Its input system will pull most anything in

They gave a full refund and paid shipping

IMO: Biggest improvements to be done?

Improve the Quality

Go to 4 cutting blades

Improve Access to tech support.

Improve access to the flywheel area

Possibly add a small tool box
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Woodland Mills WC-68

The Bad:
Input roller springs were set extremely tight. Unit initially would not take anything over an inch or so in diameter. I called and they said to loosen them. I did so two turns at a time on each side. Each adjustment improved. Finally went as loose as possible. Much better but still requires a bit of effort to get a large piece started

Should update the input system to have dual feed motors like the Woodmax. Or at least a Roller for the bottom. Current design pulls the material in while dragging it on the bottom floor. This creates a lot of resistance on larger pieces

Zerks on front bearing and U joints should be easier to get to

No Hour meter for servicing

The Good:
The feed handle position is far superior.

No issue with reaching tech support or anyone else. THEY ANSWER THE PHONE AFTER THE SALE 👍🏻

Haven’t had to do anything to it yet except the spring adjustment and lube the drive shaft u joints👍🏻

The clam shell flywheel opening is a real time saver and allows for easy inspection as well as quick blade changes when needed. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

Sits much better behind the tractor keeping the driveshaft within recommend angularity 👍🏻

Runs great on 23 PTO HP 👍🏻👍🏻

Manual well done but could be improved a bit

Biggest improvements they could do IMO:

Add a Lower input roller or better yet a motor driven roller

Devise a means on setting input roller spring tension. Weld a hex nut welded to the upper arm at the crossbar. Adjust both springs to the same length by measuring eyelet bolts. use a torque wrench for recommended settings Measure torque.

Hour meter for service intervals

Improve the manual a bit

Possibly add a small tool box

Based on my experience the WC-68 is the unit to go with
hope this helpful to others 🍻.
 
   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #2  
Thanks for the review. I was under the impression that Woodmaxx had good customer service. Didn’t realize they had sold.

Maybe that is the issue.
 
   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #3  
Didn't know they sold but the one for the tree farm works as expected for the Christmas trees...
 
   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #4  
Thanks! I literally came here to ask opinions on these two companies.

I’m looking at the WC88 vs the 8H since I have 52 HP at the PTO.

I considered the TF810pro …but I dont know if the second flywheel is worth it..

I wonder if anyone has that model here..
I’m in western NC, and I see lot of chipping in my future into the spring..

Thanks!
 
   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #5  
We have the Woodmaxx MX-8800, one of the USA made units. It has been very good so far. Our property is almost all trees and brush and burning is not allowed over half the year.

They have always been straightforward about saying the WM-8H is a China import and is not anything like the others. Many have gotten the WM-8H and like it, but you can buy the sameish unit from a lot of sources possibly for less.

The MX-8800 chips anything that will fit up until we feed too fast and the 40hp tractor finally tries to stall. I've got another big pile of chips near the front of our driveway from just last week.

It has hydrostatic feed not hydraulic so it has infinite speed adjust forward and reverse and only needs a quart or two of oil for the feed not the 5 gallons of hydraulic fluid a traditional unit uses.

The fully adjustable speed allows you to set it real slow for really big stuff so your tractor never stalls all the way to full speed feed for smaller brush.

The reverse is almost necessary if you use it a lot because you can unjam and back out anything that doesn't want to feed with no drama.

It chips up to its 8" opening max no problem. If the tree is one or two inches and has small branches you can feed it the whole tree.

They're a bit expensive, but built pretty tough.
 
   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #6  
A lot of chipping might make these smaller units not the best choice.

I was set to buy a used Bandit 65 which is small commercial but could not get there fast enough with my $5500.

Mom chipping at the farm after Christmas behind the L3800
4FEBA6B6-B8CC-4DAF-988D-CA39EC8EC0DC.jpeg
 
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   / 3 point Chippers, WC-68 vs WM-8H Actual experience #7  
You know what....... there is a GOOD reason I bought my Wallenstein BX62S. Ten years now - not a SINGLE problem.

You had to see this coming. I chip 800 to 1000 trees every other year or so. I'm a tree rancher.
 
 

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