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woodchip buying


Charleton Chips
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I think for me the bigger issue is loading, having to load the current buyers is a real PITA and kills any profit from the sale.

 

If someone offered the same as the current guys (£6 to £8 per tonne) but had grab wagons that loaded themselves, that would be a real winner IMO.

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I think for me the bigger issue is loading, having to load the current buyers is a real PITA and kills any profit from the sale.

 

If someone offered the same as the current guys (£6 to £8 per tonne) but had grab wagons that loaded themselves, that would be a real winner IMO.

 

Loading is the killer, at least £20 a ton, if you have load.

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Yes, but a roro service would work.

 

Ordinary roro bins are about 35m3, a walking floor chip wagon is 100m3, even then the payload is only reached with high mc chip, about 25 tonnes. The 8 wheeler hooklift probably costs about the same to run as the 44 tonne walking floor artic and with delivery costs around £12/tonne...

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John is talking about collecting chip for his own use on a local scale.

 

A full size 8 wheeler bin holds 45 or 50 cubic metres, although filling it with a small chipper would be tricky as you would have to chip through the open door.

 

I was more thinking of smaller bins on a 18 tonner, drop 5-6 bins off in the morning on site for local tree surgeons, pick them up at the end of the day, 100-120 cubic metres a day would be plenty.

 

Don't forget that although you only get £8-10 a tonne for chip, by the time its dry and delivered to the power station its being sold for £75 a tonne.

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Ordinary roro bins are about 35m3, a walking floor chip wagon is 100m3, even then the payload is only reached with high mc chip, about 25 tonnes. The 8 wheeler hooklift probably costs about the same to run as the 44 tonne walking floor artic and with delivery costs around £12/tonne...

 

Thats the problem wet chip standing around. I would much rather pay for fresh chip by the m3 which is easier to dry. How much do you normally chip in a day. I bet it is nearer 4 IBC's than 35 m3. Practically far easier towing 4 IBC's on an Ifor trailer then messing with a roro skip.

My trailer would drop off and collect 32 IBC's at a time so similar capacity to a roro but I do think more practical.

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