fastpat
Silver Member
I picked it up yesterday and my brother and I spent the next 5 hours assembling it. Here's the pics so far.
In the freight terminal. The supervisor got on the forklift and set it in my pickup. Picking up the unit from the terminal saved me nearly $200.00 shipping charges over delivering it here. Cost me an hour's time.
The chipper was bolted to an iron shipping frame which was banded to a wooden pallet.
The PTO driveshaft is in the corrugated board box.
After arriving home, we pulled the pallet onto the lift gate on the pickup (wonderful things those are), lowered to the ground and pulled it off that; pulling courtesy of my tractor.
We unbolted the iron shipping frame to enable taking all the component pieces out from around the chipper, and so we could hoist it up in the air.
The chipper has to be elevated up to enable attaching the base which is made up of four steel plates, cut and bent to shape. Note that the hoisting is done via a lift point on the chipper into which I've inserted a hardened steel locking pin of about 3/4 inch diameter. The lift strap is a 3333 lbs. capacity tie down strap.
Here we have the chipper sitting on its newly assembled base, with just a few odds and ends left to intall. Items such as the discharge chute, the input chute extension, and so forth.
More pictures of the machine in use later.
In the freight terminal. The supervisor got on the forklift and set it in my pickup. Picking up the unit from the terminal saved me nearly $200.00 shipping charges over delivering it here. Cost me an hour's time.

The chipper was bolted to an iron shipping frame which was banded to a wooden pallet.

The PTO driveshaft is in the corrugated board box.

After arriving home, we pulled the pallet onto the lift gate on the pickup (wonderful things those are), lowered to the ground and pulled it off that; pulling courtesy of my tractor.

We unbolted the iron shipping frame to enable taking all the component pieces out from around the chipper, and so we could hoist it up in the air.

The chipper has to be elevated up to enable attaching the base which is made up of four steel plates, cut and bent to shape. Note that the hoisting is done via a lift point on the chipper into which I've inserted a hardened steel locking pin of about 3/4 inch diameter. The lift strap is a 3333 lbs. capacity tie down strap.


Here we have the chipper sitting on its newly assembled base, with just a few odds and ends left to intall. Items such as the discharge chute, the input chute extension, and so forth.

More pictures of the machine in use later.