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Fault code on GM Arborist 150 help.


Mick Dempsey
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2 hours ago, Mick Dempsey said:

Well suck me dry and call me Dusty! It worked! I can only imagine the mechanic played with it when finding the other fault.

Thanks to all for your help.

I I can just improve the fork crushing power a bit we might have a chipper on out hands!

Mick , is the spring on the moving roller tight enough  ? Does it snap back if you try to pull the carriage across by hand or does it feel elastic  ?

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53 minutes ago, Jase hutch said:

Mick , is the spring on the moving roller tight enough  ? Does it snap back if you try to pull the carriage across by hand or does it feel elastic  ?

I have tried that, no difference, I think the rollers could use a touch up with a dremmel.

I did that to a GM220 and it transformed it.

Anyway, it functions well enough for the little trim jobs for the moment so I’m happy.

Edited by Mick Dempsey
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  • 4 weeks later...

Just a little update.

I gave the rollers a bit of a touch up with a flappy disc, nothing too drastic and it suddenly chips, pulls and crushes like it did the day it left the factory!

As good as my old TW150 which is all I was after. 
So problems mostly ironed out and a happy camper!

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  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...

More fine tuning….

The top of the hopper just before the feed rollers has bowed upwards and the weld was failing. Due I’m sure to the previous owners employees ramming oversize wood in, still, a surprising weak point. 
This was making the infeed troublesome so needed sorting. 
We cut out a section and welded a new piece in. 
Question. 
I discovered the funny bit to the left of the non static feed roller had broken it’s mounting and was moving loosely. 
I took it out (see second to last picture)

 iirc you can use the machine quite happily without it, any owners experience of this?

729D7281-9CCB-4C3C-8BD5-A4638CE92BF9.jpeg

8775B069-B9B5-4518-AD5A-C97736BFAB20.jpeg

6B9DE7A6-0071-4A1B-8E18-AC7CB4A369F4.jpeg

BF5D5EE4-4D00-4A56-AD21-BA3E3E22878A.jpeg

DDBA4B5B-ED92-44B5-8B2A-B70CFF35996E.jpeg

Edited by Mick Dempsey
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2 hours ago, Mick Dempsey said:

More fine tuning….

The top of the hopper just before the feed rollers has bowed upwards and the weld was failing. Due I’m sure to the previous owners employees ramming oversize wood in, still, a surprising weak point. 
This was making the infeed troublesome so needed sorting. 
We cut out a section and welded a new piece in. 
Question. 
I discovered the funny bit to the left of the non static feed roller had broken it’s mounting and was moving loosely. 
I took it out (see second to last picture)

 iirc you can use the machine quite happily without it, any owners experience of this?

729D7281-9CCB-4C3C-8BD5-A4638CE92BF9.jpeg

8775B069-B9B5-4518-AD5A-C97736BFAB20.jpeg

6B9DE7A6-0071-4A1B-8E18-AC7CB4A369F4.jpeg

BF5D5EE4-4D00-4A56-AD21-BA3E3E22878A.jpeg

DDBA4B5B-ED92-44B5-8B2A-B70CFF35996E.jpeg

The hopper on the 130 is the same. I just bent it back with a hammer  and punch,  and filled in the gap with weld. It has lasted 3 years so far.

Greenmech need to produce a hopper with a strip of much thicker steel .

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