Around here that don't work. All the arborists here dump their wood chips at a couple yards where the process them and color them and resell them to homeowners as colored mulch. Big business here.You might look into getting chips from a tree service. Often they will be happy to dump chips on your property instead of driving them to the dump and paying to dump them.
Looks like the one I had and subsequently sold. I set it up to run on one of my 90 horse Kubota tractors. I did add a weasler slip clutch so I wouldn't destroy it but it held up and I sold it for exactly what I paid for it on FB market place in 2 days. 90 pto really eats up logs well.ive been using my chipper for the last 15 years. it used to run on a 28HP tractor and did a soso job chipping. It now runs on my 45KW tractor and can chip up to 6" logs very reasonably. i also use my chips on the trails. it amazing how little trail gets covered with a huge chip pile though. the chips help keep grass from growing on the trail.
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its chinese made, but has held up great. parts are still available if needed. but swapping blades sucks.Looks like the one I had and subsequently sold. I set it up to run on one of my 90 horse Kubota tractors. I did add a weasler slip clutch so I wouldn't destroy it but it held up and I sold it for exactly what I paid for it on FB market place in 2 days. 90 pto really eats up logs well.
It's a Jinma right? What I had and yes, swapping knives was a PITA. I always spaced my knife to anvil clearance with an expired credit card. Only thing it didn't do good with was pine tree limbs that were green. Like to plug up on them. Everything else went right through.its chinese made, but has held up great. parts are still available if needed. but swapping blades sucks.
I just purchased an LX2610 and was looking for a chipper, couldn't decide on which type to get, the PTO driven or a stand alone, I went with a standalone and I'm glad I did. I was patient, keep looking for a used machine, i was lucky, I came across an excellant condition Troy Built 18 HP Chipper. It can be towed behind a car, ATV and my tractor, it has about the same HP as my PTO and will chip up to about a 6 inch log (anything larger is just firewood) and when I'm done with it, I can roll it into the garage and place it in the corner out of the way.Let me begin buy saying I have never owned or used a chipper but I have considered getting one. I am considering a stand-alone chipper that can be towed behind my ATV and used wherever. My goal isn't as much to chip material to get rid of it but chip material just to get the chippings to be used around the property. So my question is, are these little chippers with 6-15HP engines any good? Are there some better than others? Mot all what I am seeing have around a 6.5HP engine on them but I have seen a couple older models on market place with 10-15hp engines. So educate me on these chippers, please.
When chipping stuff that is likely to clog (lots of green leaves, and especially, cedar trees) I try to have a pile of branches without any leaves handy to feed in between the green stuff. The big chips act like fiber in the chipper diet to keep the flow going. Ewwww.My original chipper - Wallenstein BX42S - would plug when chipping my green pines. Not enough HP - not enough air flow. I used it with my Ford 1700.
In 2009 I bought my Kubota M6040 and upgraded to a Wally BX62S. This solved the plugging problems. More than twice the HP and a whole lot more air flow.
I devised a plan that solved the plugging with the BX42S. Thin my pine stands - drag the thinned pines to large piles - let them sit a full year and dry out. This worked with very little plugging.
There was a guy at my parents neighbour, cutting the underbrush for firewood and chipping the branches. I have heard that Honda jam so many times, in the end the crankshaft broke... a twig mulcher it was, even though the decal said "tree chipper"No, not really. They're a waste of time. It'll take forever to get any significant amount of chips.
Yes, thats a chipper.. with hydraulic driven feed rolls, and kickback if the drum rpm drops too low. Thats the only way to get consistently sized chips.My last chipper had a 100 HP Cummins engine and would chip 12" logs.