All Activity
- Past hour
-
Welcome to hire companies, its not the case of you've been done over ,its business, you broke it you pay for it...its probably that genuine parts have to be fitted in accordance with the hse policy and insurance. Have to take care of someone else's machine next time .shit happens
-
I guess u mean that stupid plastic stop switch
-
I have used them for around 12 years and can't fault them....perhaps we both should be on commission 👍
-
Well Elon Musk didn't pull any punches in his litle slot did he 😂
-
Would you use the BDB if it was CE marked?
-
I still have a BDB but 10/10 climbs I use a RRPro. I am a good boy now and have a CE marked one. Been climbing on the non CE since the device was launched.
-
The last three paragraphs made sense,however it like so many other articles forgets the mass riots and murders by BLM and ANTIFA.
- Today
-
It is a good article however slightly undermines its point by introducing Charlie Kirk as a “figurehead of the far right”. Further echoes impartiality by only referencing far right actions (especially given the current climate) but its key three points I feel are bang on the money!
-
-
Wordle 1,547 3/6 🟨🟩🟨⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟨🟩🟨 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
-
Again, another rambling…… On from the skid steer idea, after chatting to a few people my way who run both I’ve decided a digger makes more sense for the workload/type, plus they are similar money and more versatile! I’ve got my heart set on a 1.8/2t machine, that will go on my 2700 plant trailer (weighs 600kg) and has vari tracks for access. I know 2.7t machines will move more but the lower weight/versatility is more important to me currently (plus they are cheaper) Does anyone out there run the smaller bobcat e19 or e20 as an arb digger, or a machine if a similar size-if so how do you find them? I did try trawling the arb digger thread but ran out of concentrate……..
-
oudolfG joined the community
-
No express terms for grease and oil so you’re falling back on terms implied by industrial notoriety. Burning engine oil is definitely their problem. Fuel would almost certainly be yours (receive it full, return it full or pay £x/litre). Grease I’m undecided. I’ve never been asked to grease a digger when hiring. You expect them to do that before it comes out to you. Probably their problem unless it’s some kind of machine you’re meant to grease throughout the day. Switch is on you and bear in mind it might be a £10 part but a man had to find the right one, order it, find the card details to pay for it etc etc etc. £90/hour workshop rate sounds reasonable. Plus you could have gashed up the next day’s hire for it by breaking it. Special delivery for the part maybe. Were CPA terms incorporated? Hiring’s miserable isn’t it. I nearly always look for a man and machine now.
-
kram started following Fair or unfair?
-
I'd say they are taking the piss, maintence and small damages should be accounted for in the hire price, grease and oil are standard maintence that they should be doing before/after each hire so its ready for the next guy. I'd suggest he disputes the charges which may be easier if credit card was used.
-
Excels1or changed their profile photo
-
This is a good discussion of the wider picture, if anyone is interested. Charlie Kirk shooting: another grim milestone in America’s long and increasingly dangerous story of political violence THECONVERSATION.COM Increasing polarisation and a lack of measured debate is fuelling violence in a nation awash with guns. For reference: I'd consider myself to be atheist, (on the milder end of the scale), and yet I possess a strong moral compass and principles.
-
..which is what's really daft. Our local hire place for chippers and grinders are generally pleased to be told there's something wrong so they can get it fixed before it ruins the next hire. Consequently I've been there quite a few times over the years. Your place reminds me of hiring a car from an airport - I almost always walk out of those places feeling like I've been done over even when I haven't.
-
Top 10 most popular wood-burning and multifuel stoves
Stubby replied to BowlandStoves's topic in General chat
-
Yes but his pile of scabs is going to be like a pack of crisps to an elephant.
-
Is the BDB still the one to beat?
-
Don't the biomass companies have their own chippers?
-
Ever tried garden centres? Tipper trailer a week kind of thing. Or bag it for them if you can be bothered.
-
There may be but I don't have a chipper or the space to keep it until it was a lorry load. I don't think I could send it for biomass as it is because it is in loose bundles.
-
It is a puzzle for sure. Also remember this is totally unseasoned timber so once processed into manageable lengths I then have to keep it in IBC cages for a year or more, properly covered and with good airflow. And then finally I have a product which is brilliant for getting a fire going, but not so good for maintaining a nice slow burn. Not enough chunky stuff. So the bottom line is the amount of time and covered space it takes to process, dry and sell it is just not viable.
-
Sounds like there is little improvement with the version you had then. It's a shame, the compactness and ease of on and off is great, like a BDB. But the frustration of ****************ing about with settings is no good. Atleast it's got replaceable bits so isn't a throw away device after a year like the first version.