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  2. kram

    Makita DUC150

    The Fakita appears good, it does have a proper oiler and reasonably sized brushless motor. It is a 1/4" chain. I like the mini narrow bars. 1.5kg without battery, 2.1kg with Makita battery.
  3. They take a fair amount of space and are heavy to move, also needing power or compressed air. Wouldnt have been practical for me, I have extremely limited space.
  4. I'm in exactly the same position as you, Muddy. Take the plunge and report back please.
  5. Its worth getting tub of proper tyre lube and fairy can cause corrosion, lots of salt in it.
  6. Muddy and Mick (and indeed several other people now I re-read) are onto something I think. Have an expert do the precision work and buy a backhoe for the rest of it? Or do it all with the backhoe if you have the patience. Forget bog work obviously.
  7. He's beyond tapped. Trumpanzees: If Biden was rambling on like this would you have given him a free ride too? 692K views · 22K reactions | This madman, who thinks there is some... WWW.FACEBOOK.COM This madman, who thinks there is some kind of magic valve that takes a day to turn to release water from the north, is the same lunatic that was handed the nuclear launch codes 🤦.
  8. Today
  9. thanks, but £200 would be too much for the number of tyres I do.
  10. If I wanted to live and work in central London I would become IRATA level 3 and be done with tree work.
  11. Buy a proper garage tyre machine, we picked one up used for £200 with a wheel balancer out of a local garage. Have changed countless chipper tyres with it. Fit our own van tyres also.
  12. Hello everyone, I am after some insight on other peoples experience regarding how they have progressed within the industry. A little about myself. I am coming up to 13 years as a tree surgeon, working at least 10 of those years as a lead climber. Somewhat varied work ranging from pruning council/street trees within central London for many years, to working as a self employed lead climber/team leader around west London/Buckinghamshire area, completing large scale jobs/projects. The last few years have been a mixture of self employed climbing for various companies a few days a week, with the other days working for my business with my truck, chipper and tools. Recently I have started to question if this is something i want to continue. For a couple of reasons; 1. I am really starting to feel the toll on my body. I'm only 32 but am aware if i keep working the way I do, I wont be able to physically keep doing the job in a few years to come. 2. Potentially looking to move more into central London , so would not look forward to figuring out the logistics of running a tree surgery firm considering how stressful i already find it on the outskirts in what i consider a more spacious/work friendly area. 3. I have recently started to feel like the work i currently do doesn't leave me fulfilled. I.e. working as a self employed climber seemed that companies would only get me in for large scale takedowns (on trees that most of the time i was personally conflicted as to the reasons they would be coming down) or pile on the amount of work needed to be completed in a day. Basically i've felt like a bit a wrecking ball, just coming in and smashing out work with no pride for my work. Does anyone have experience with moving away from climbing full time that also doesn't follow down the path of starting a tree surgery business? I am happy to go back and study, maybe just a little bit lost where to start and what the end goal would be. I have been self employed for a while now and I'm not sure if it suits me to be honest. For myself i feel like the only benefit is that I don't have restrictions for how much holiday i can take. Realistically i am trying to put things in place before we move to central London. In an ideal world i think i would love to climb 2/3 days per week and spend the other days in a less physical capacity within the industry. I know this isn't an ideal world. Again i just seem overwhelmed and lost as this type of work is all i've known. Any advice or comments would be greatly appreciated. or if you have any more questions or need more info from me Thanks
  13. Time Left: 6 days and 21 hours

    • FOR SALE
    • USED

    Pezzolato PTH 30.50 biomass wood chipper The PTH 30.50 is the ideal chipper both for the maintenance of greenery (thanks to the large feed hopper, is able to easily insert even bulky material), both for the wood and forest maintenance technician who needs, in addition to disposing of to reduce volumes and produce quality wood chips. Minimum/maximum tractor power: 60-130HP / 44-95 kW Maximum inlet passage: 500 x 300mm Maximum chipping diameter: 300mm Knives: 3 Hourly throughput: 10-16m/h3 Drum diameter: 520mm Drum width: 500mm Upper roller width: 500mm Weight: 2,300kg Hours: 44

    £98,000

    Long Bennington, Nottinghamshire - GB

  14. Time Left: 6 days and 21 hours

    • FOR SALE
    • USED

    Pezzolato PTH 30.50 biomass wood chipper The PTH 30.50 is the ideal chipper both for the maintenance of greenery (thanks to the large feed hopper, is able to easily insert even bulky material), both for the wood and forest maintenance technician who needs, in addition to disposing of to reduce volumes and produce quality wood chips. Minimum/maximum tractor power: 60-130HP / 44-95 kW Maximum inlet passage: 500 x 300mm Maximum chipping diameter: 300mm Knives: 3 Hourly throughput: 10-16m/h3 Drum diameter: 520mm Drum width: 500mm Upper roller width: 500mm Weight: 2,300kg Hours: 44

    £75,000

    Long Bennington, Nottinghamshire - GB

  15. Alright all. I'm pretty new to carving, over the past few years I've done a handful of pieces mainly just because I like doing it. I've never really tried to sell my work but I would like to start. I've not invested loads of money in it, still just playing with a stock bar and die grinder with a couple of different burrs but it'd be nice to recover some of my fuel costs if poss. My question is, those of you who do sell your work, how and where do you do it? Is it better to carve up things in advance on the hope people might buy them or do you mainly get commissions? I've stuck on some photos to give you an idea of where I'm at with it. Thanks in advance. WhatsApp Vidéo 2025-09-01 à 13.29.23_6efc7c2a.mp4
  16. Generally its re-mounting a new tyre. I can break the beads by getting all the air out then jumping on the tyre. Agreed I use lots of fairy liquid and push the tyre into the centre and any old compressor seems fine. A ratchet strap can also help temporarily force the rims to seat while you put air in.
  17. Yes. 3/8" is the pitch wheras the 0.050 and 0.043 are the gauge. The width of the rail on the chainsaw bar will determine the gauge of the chain and the pitch needs to be the same as the nose and the drive sprocket. Chain, guide bar and sprocket identification - Chainsawbars WWW.CHAINSAWBARS.CO.UK Identifying a chain, guide bar and sprocket on a chainsaw can be tricky. Use our guide to easily take you through how to...
  18. Dunno, he’s dead now so cannot ask. I know he said getting the footings right was the biggest challenge, as if they’re too big (sloppy digger work) it costs a fortune in extra concrete.
  19. JasonN

    Grousehill

    House with driveway for tipping
  20. We have large concrete bays for dropping material off and are capable of accepting large or multiple loads, without any problem
  21. I forgot to ask, which part of the process is defeating you? I assume breaking the beads, as thats usually my problem. If its mounting and demounting, make sure your using plenty of tyre soap/lube and have the opposing side of the tyre pushed into the centre. For popping the tyre beads I usually manage with a small car tyre inflator. Very rarely do I need the big compressor, I havent used that in several years.
  22. How are you all getting these slabs to dry flat? I don't even bother slabbing now because anything that has the pith in turns into an Escher painting after a few months on the stack.
  23. Hi i have question. On the Echo 2511 tes, it is same socket for chain 3/8" .050 and .043? I want change for oregon bar 12" and chain 3/8" .043 . Thank you
  24. thanks. Yes I have a concrete floor in mind that I can bolt it too.
  25. I bought one of those a while back after getting a puncture in my car, perhaps two months ago. I put a temporary repair string in the tyre.. not yet fitted it to floor or finished adapting it. You can get an upgrade kit with a ducks head, alu cone and arm, to allow changing alloys without scratching them. I didnt buy the arm and will weld one up. This sort of thing https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0F3WB63SX However for small stuff I have a Stenor. Its great for breaking motorcycle tyres but found cars are too big.
  26. David J Morgan

    Morgan

    To be dropped onto the driveway
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