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Posted
I always think about getting an alpine magnum but have never committed... Looks like hardwork..:001_smile:

 

I reckon I'd have that done in less than 2 hours with the Magnum. The longest part is digging the soil away from around it as the magnum teeth don't last too long in the dirt and cost £60 a set. It's bloody thirsty too with a Husky 3120xp head running on full trigger. They are a very capable machine though and ideally suited for jobs like that. With a set of new teeth, they cut wood at a rather alarming rate! It's a shame you're not a bit closer or I'd have been able to help.

I also suspect I could get my Rayco 20hp up that slope as it has some very treaded mini tractor tyres on and has dragged me up some very steep hills!

Starting off is a bit slow, but the spoil quickly provides a work platform. It's hard to tell from a photo though.

The beauty of the magnum is that it mounts on a single spike, so you could attack that from any angle. It's a different technique where you need to cut down along the grain rather than sweep sideways like a conventional grinder.

They are hard work though and not a machine for the faint-hearted!

SG

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Posted

I've taken advice from hundreds of my domestic customers on this one and apparently if you cut some grooves in a crisscross pattern and/or drill some holes in the top of it, it will disappear in about 25 years.

 

 

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Posted
I've taken advice from hundreds of my domestic customers on this one and apparently if you cut some grooves in a crisscross pattern and/or drill some holes in the top of it, it will disappear in about 25 years.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Arbtalk

 

Only if you then add creosote though!

Posted

Stumpy Grinder is right.

I would use my Alpine and a chainsaw on this.

First clean around with the Mag, than cut as low as possible, then grind the left roots with the Alpine, should take 1-2 hours, probably less.

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