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How to move a broke down tracked chipper?


simonm
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We had this happen about two three weeks back on woman's small drive way in Maidenhead would not start put it down to starter packed up

Had to use my hiab on transit picked up the chipper and had to slide the trailer under it and as the jockey wheel is broken / removed had to put the chipper on the end to keep the hitch in the air so could hook it back up onto the transit and then pull it onto the trailer pain in the ads but got it home to find the battery live cable had perished

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Tracks have an internal brake which is released only when oil flows. If it is engine based and cannot be fixed on site, use a donkey engine and another pump plumbed into circuit and inch it off.

 

I have seen major works carried out on site before - inconvenient maybe, but sometimes it is the only way.

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Tracks have an internal brake which is released only when oil flows. If it is engine based and cannot be fixed on site, use a donkey engine and another pump plumbed into circuit and inch it off.

 

I have seen major works carried out on site before - inconvenient maybe, but sometimes it is the only way.

 

Don't you still offer the option of a 12V electric pump in tandem with the engine driven one for this very reason?

 

Nowadays we have to have a crane available for lifting a dead chipper off site on rail work.

 

I have also had a 10 year old track snap where the wires had corroded through cracks in the casing but we were carrying a spare, it was an eye opener as it looked unworn otherwise.

 

Again with another we lost a track in mud on a hillside construction site and had to drag it out with a 360 to work on it, no significant damage to the under gear.

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Looks like you have two options, winch it somewhere by inches if the ground conditions suit..

 

Fix it....

 

 

OK, just thought of a third way, two pieces of plywood in front of it, greased up.

winch onto plywood platform, then winch that on a trailer...

or just stick loads of grease on trailer an loading struts..

 

If the Egyptians did it like that, then so can you...LOL..

 

I'm fairly sure that when the ancient Egyptians had a tracked machine go down they phoned a hydraulic specialist to bring a portable hydraulic pack to site. Seen it on a documentary.

 

Got to be worth speaking to a local hydraulic firm if you run those machines just in case.

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