Chipper accident

   / Chipper accident #13  
My chipper - Wallenstein BX62S. ALL my young pines are fed in - butt first. The chipper grabs the butt end and jerks it into the chipper so hard/fast - it's scary.

The butt end is laid on the lip of the chipper. Go back 20, 25, 30 feet to the top and lift it up and slide it in. It will "digest" and spit out a 30 foot tree in less than ten seconds.

This jerking/pulling action has scared many who come for the day to help me.

They learn in a real big hurry. Lift it up - slide it in - let go of it - back away.
 
   / Chipper accident #14  
I have an Echo Bearcat 9 inch chipper with hydraulic feed. There is a safety bar around the entire outside of the chute that can stop or reverse the hydraulic feed. The end of the chute is only a foot square, meaning unless something can be compress into something less than a foot square, it's not getting to the blades because there is a giant roller in the way that goes up and down on a spring mechanism.

I use to have a manual feed chipper with direct exposure to the blades. Trying to force things in, one quickly figures out, it very dangerous to get a hand too far in the chute.

I will always have hydraulic feed chippers, let the hydraulics do the tough part of the job. I never really have my hands in farther than a few inches, then the roller takes over.
 
   / Chipper accident #15  
I occasionally( note, I did say occasionally) get assistance from my son and his friends. They are allowed to " pull from the pile and bring to my chipper". I am the only person who will put the trees into the chipper.

This is good. Growing up, I did a lot of tree work. My best friend‘s dad did it, full time. I about died, several times. They had a giant trailer chipper that could take anything we could feed it. As kids, it was fun to put the large stuff in, just to see if it would eat it. It always did.

One day we were putting stuff in the giant chipper, by ourselves. I was probably around ten years old, maybe a bit younger. I got a big (for me, anyway) branch started and turned to get the next branch. As the chipper pulled the branch in it snagged me. Since I was facing away from the chipper, to grab the next branch, I was pulled backwards. I ended up getting pulled up onto the feed tray and in a full panic was able to twist enough and hang onto the edges of the feeding tray tight enough the branch went in, without me. It did rip my shirt and I had some skin missing and I was terrified, but continued working like nothing happened. When they asked what happened to my shirt, I just said a branch got it. I’m still scared of those damn things. I’ll use them, but I’m much more careful, many years later.

Another time I about died was when I about fell out of a double bucket truck at near full extension. The truck was parked as close to the house as it could be and we were over a house. I had a chainsaw, in one hand, and would hold the cut branch, with the other. After making the cut, we had to swing the branch, so it wouldn’t hit the house. Unfortunately, I was too short for my feet to reach the bottom of the bucket and still work. I used the edge of the bucket, to hold my waist, while I had my legs pushed against the sides of the opposite side of the bucket to lock me in. One of the branches gave way as I was cutting, before I was ready and was too heavy, for me to stop it. It jerked my legs out of the bucket before I could let go of the branch and get the saw clear. Fortunately, the way I got pulled I ended up jammed between the bucket and the linkage holding the bucket, just not in the bucket. I also managed to not drop the Stihl saw. I sat there, frozen, one hand holding the saw, the other arm wrapped around part of the boom (stick? I don’t know what the part is called). My friend was in the other bucket and tried to help me get back in my bucket, but he was too far away and too little to really to help. I managed to relax enough and get back in my bucket and back to work, but since then, I’ve had trouble with heights. After that, I only worked in the bucket truck, when I had to.

My friend took over his father’s business. Sadly, next week will be the fourth anniversary, of his death. Nearly four years ago, he was in a bucket and accidentally hit a power line. As it was reported, by his brother, who just happened to stop by to pick something up, my friend hit the line and was immediately on fire. The brother jumped on the truck and started moving the bucket to the ground. When he got about ten feet away, my friend, who was flailing around due to actively being on fire, fell out of the bucket and landed on his head. His brother got the fire out and help on the way. He was then flown to a burn unit. I drove a hundred miles to see him, even though we had not spoken, in a few years. I had been a cop and a fire fighter, for several years, and have seen about everything bad there is to see, but didn’t go in and see him. I made it to his door. I talked to his family and left. He died a couple days later.
 
   / Chipper accident #16  
The Bandit looks like a man eater. Why would any company make such a large "chuck and duck" machine? Controlled feed with safety bars to stop and reverse make way too much sense over the lower cost. My Champion gas powered unit requires a lot of attention.
 
   / Chipper accident
  • Thread Starter
#17  
This may have changed but tree company Asplundh always used chippers which weren't self feeding.
 
   / Chipper accident #18  
This may have changed but tree company Asplundh always used chippers which weren't self feeding.
I've seen quite a few "chuck and duck" chippers used by Asplundh over the years. Looks like those are getting phased out since the new ones have the safety bar.
Still a lot of gypsy tree trimmers around, with older equipment.
Before I bought my Woodmaxx, I had a Woods 5000 chipper/shredder which could handle up to a 5" branch or trunk. It was gravity feed and unless one purposely stuck their arm down the chute, there was no way one could be pulled in. The unit also had a brush chute on top....now, that pulled in like the speed of light....almost scary!
Good implement though...had it for years. Ran it behind a Deere 790, then a Deere 4400.
 
   / Chipper accident #19  
I've seen quite a few "chuck and duck" chippers used by Asplundh over the years. Looks like those are getting phased out since the new ones have the safety bar.
Still a lot of gypsy tree trimmers around, with older equipment.
Before I bought my Woodmaxx, I had a Woods 5000 chipper/shredder which could handle up to a 5" branch or trunk. It was gravity feed and unless one purposely stuck their arm down the chute, there was no way one could be pulled in. The unit also had a brush chute on top....now, that pulled in like the speed of light....almost scary!
Good implement though...had it for years. Ran it behind a Deere 790, then a Deere 4400.
I think what Asplundh and Davey used was what was available at the time of purchase, but have been getting phased out as the newer safer equipment became available. I am not sure the self feeding roller type chippers were even that available 20-30 years ago.
 
   / Chipper accident
  • Thread Starter
#20  
I think what Asplundh and Davey used was what was available at the time of purchase, but have been getting phased out as the newer safer equipment became available. I am not sure the self feeding roller type chippers were even that available 20-30 years ago.
They were. In 1987 I worked a while for a small company out of Athol, Mass. and the chippers they had were self feeding
 
 
Top