murphy1244
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2011
- Messages
- 16,326
- Location
- Ohio
- Tractor
- Kubota 1120 RTV Kioti DK-40, MF-135, Ventrac 4500Y
That is the bad thing about the cheaper chippers - they use belts. The Wallenstien chipper is direct drive with no belts or pulley which is part of the reason why they are known for having better reliability.
The Woodmaxx chippers I am familiar with seem to have much better quality control standards and if you research them it appears they do a GREAT job standing behind their product if there is a problem. Personally if I spend a bunch of money on something I do expect it to work correctly and without issue. I know my employer does not expect me to make mistakes and leave people with a product that needs repaired. To me if the fixes are simple, why not spend the extra $5 and use locking nuts and such. At that point I doubt the company will lose a lot of sales charging the extra $5 on the product and will have a lot more people happy with the product. I understand for 5030 he is pleased with his chipper and don't mind the extra time it takes and in his case that works out. In my case I rather spend a little more and have a product that works the first time, every time because I am often limited on time so a break down will cause me to not be able to complete a job.
Nothing wrong with either way, just a different way of looking at it.
My Wally BXM-42 is belt driven and I have had 0 problems with it.