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MattyF

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Everything posted by MattyF

  1. Thanks , should of googled heat shrink instead of rope marking ! Never mind ...
  2. They have sold out ... can’t find any thing similar on any other sites
  3. Big fan of the safe bloc , but will still use a pulley for most dismantles , rarely use rings unless it’s a one off top on a spar or something ,just don’t really see the point in them for day to day rigging ... I was probably still using topping strops until 15 years back along with natural crotch rigging and the revaluation of adding a isc block changed a lot of my larger rigging so it just feels a step back for rigging.
  4. Any one point me in the direction of a marking system preferably heat shrink that will fit large rigging ropes, can only find climbing ones by stein and Beal with the usual searches.
  5. Just a scaled down version of the 3001 , but still meaty enough for take downs in uk.
  6. Also kind of brings the point home that we don’t need two ropes just get the idiots out of this industry who can’t maintain and use faulty incorrect gear endangering there own lives and others.
  7. RC 2000 is almost as good as a bollard and nice and easy to set up , maybe a little cheaper than the p500 ,I would definitely take one over a port a wrap for serious rigging. You definitely can’t go wrong with the rc2001 for a fixed bollard . you have the choice of changing to rubber mounts , I’ve rigged out some very big trees and lumps with them and it was my go to device before I got a Hobbs. The pinnacle of lowering is the GCRS but it’s expensive and not as robust as the hobbs , well in my hands any way...
  8. I do prefer the isc locking over the dmm , maybe not as smooth but I trust it more, once it’s in its in, once or twice I have had the dmm open...but the dmm is far sexier and takes a lot more KN so I would not hesitate to replace with another, I just really check over them once set and I’ve not had an issue.
  9. Haha , or you can slang that to show is your Pauline then .... Pauline Fowler = big hairy growler.
  10. If starting from scratch a Transit and chipper will see through most jobs and just make you more money than any other set up , to be honest I would probably stick with that and hire in any thing else as it’s a never ending slippery slope with the exception of a 4x4 to price work and use the chipper off road ,once you have made a bit more then you are on too the endless slippery slope in to grinders,tractors , loaders, tracked chippers ,unimogs ,big F off Chipper’s ,diggers and any thing else I missed that will rinse you of any cash and keep you in the bank managers pocket but will always be keep you thinking if I had that one last tool life would be easier and I’ll make more money [emoji23]
  11. Simples then sell more than 2m cubes a time , more profit in a day than doing the usual 1.5m loads we do. Will be impossible for us to reach the 20% in the north ,the logs will reach what’s in the environment, we can get them down to 15% in summer but it just goes back up in winter to around 20% and that’s with two years or more storage and then 10-8 months in a barn.
  12. Only grief my 05 gave me was clutches , retired it this year with a 178k on it ,chassis was solid and engine and box still fine but sills where not! Just used as a yard log truck now.
  13. It’s gone... along with half the husky range too.
  14. I use this Oregon one for my milling chains , have never used it for anything else but I would go with caution with a bench grinder, very easy to overheat the cutters and blue a chain, I take my time and have a pot of oil brush it on every tooth each grind once or twice ... but then I’m pretty ocd about Milling chains being absolutely spot on to avoid lots of unnecessary sanding later and no dives in cuts.
  15. Thanks, I will get some one to check it out ,the relief valve was a pita a few years back , I could of messed it up further by playing with it or I have just knocked the pump reversing on full lock off the trailer draw bar putting in a fracture... which does not make sense as I recently had the whole lot moved in to a better position to prevent this.
  16. There is a parker part number on it but if you type it in and do a search it comes up with something completely different!
  17. Thanks John was looking at eBay prices for similar items and a lot cheaper but have no idea what the flow rate , cc rate and max pressure is ! , every thing has come and broke down at once !! would there be any advantage to fitting a higher flow rate pump ?
  18. Any body know what the pump flow rate for the pump is or have a link for a direct replacement? Keep cracking the backs of the pump every other year and have three broken ones sitting in the workshop.... Wilson’s want £500 + for a new one !
  19. Think the secret is right there to not getting tangles , two bridges and two swivels !
  20. Think you have a lot more to give us reg you probably have more experience of different trees and climates that only a few in the world have ...That is some thing else at that height , tallest conifers I’ve worked on where 41 metre silver firs and I probably dropped 15m out just because it was so bloody tiring and I was getting chicken and out of my comfort zone at around 25m dunno if I could of coped with that height! Your bloody right on the ropes as well , had too get in to the top of a wind blown beech a few weeks back so at around 70ft I had tried to transition in to the tree , the weight of two full climbing lines against you and the throw hook line felt like it was dislocating your hips with the weight!
  21. I think the problem is with Great Britain is it’s wet ,thousand of years ago most of our countryside was bog , it’s been drained off for agriculture and forestry and housing, probably a lot more efficiently in recent years , they are still ploughing up ancient pasture for arable and whilst the forestry commission is being a bit more thoughtful with its drainage the likes of tilhill , euro forest and now by his comments big j [emoji38] want more upland planted with spruce are not... I was watching the forestry drains on the other side of the burn at the weekend , they where like violent rapids and cascading waterfalls resulting in this , this was some of the last FC land brought in compulsory purchase and was only planted in the 80’s back then and still until recently there was big grants for land reclamation.... all that water has to go somewhere ! Whilst I agree with planting upland smashing up drains and blocking ditches to create habitat , planting spruce In it is not the answer.
  22. I think from the blue book assessment it was demonstrate the use of cuts and situations used. From memory and it was around 25 years ago ! For my particular course which overall was a year long and went from one week practical to one week theory followed by nptc assessments. I can only remember it coming up In an afternoon in the class room. I think overall on our training is it shows you the principles but as you know you can not teach every type of Wood and situation that just comes from experiences and I’m still learning every day even after all that time. I guess ultimately they don’t want to teach cuts that can be unpredictable as a single cut will not always tear the same way... unless you know something I don’t.
  23. What is he teaching though ? By the book tree work.. which is good if you do not have a Clue , how many times do you see home owner or hack specials with great big tears down the collars and flush cuts, teach them properly and they can expand from there.. but you are flogging a dead horse Daniel as single cuts are taught and need to be demonstrated in Britain for NPTC assessments which if you don’t have you won’t get a job climbing for a commercial company. I still can’t believe you don’t know who jo hedger is ...

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