5030
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,998
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
I agree with Code54 & Pepsiboy. Without adequate horse power the chipper may bog down enough that it won't blow chips out the discharge chute. Its also going to put quite a strain on your tractor just to do a mediocre job. Get a chipper that falls within the power range of your tractor. There are many brands that have great chippers that fit your tractor.
Thats not entirely true. It will depend on how seasoned the wood is. If it's moist it won't discharge well, even at rated rpm. If it's dry, it will discharge fine even at low flywheel speed. I can run my tractor well below 540, like 200 pto and it blows chips from seasoned logs just fine. The ability to blow chips also depends on how much intake air is available to the flywheel. To that end (and some chippers are already modified from the factory), I drilled multiple air holes in the knife access plate on the frontside of the blower housing (input side) to allow more air into the housing. The more air going in, the more air going out the chute, the better chip flow.