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Charlieh

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Posts posted by Charlieh

  1. On 08/06/2020 at 20:30, Ty Korrigan said:

    Hello,

     Not having much luck with bars recently.

    Worn out 3 different makes of 60cm bars in 2 years on saws which are hardly used.

    Averaging 2 chains before they not longer cut straight. Kox, Stihl and Sugihara all consigned to a nail on the garage wall.

    I use Aspen bio chain oil.

    This is fine on the climbing saws and bars up to 45cm but it seems not to give enough lubrication on longer bars. My 500i oiler is on it's max, the saw is always clean and yet barely 2 chains in, the grooves are worn. Before that the 441 Kox then Sugihara met the same fate.

    So I've a fresh Sugi bar, sprocket and new chains on the 500i. Tomorrow, before starting felling I'll empty the Aspen chain oil back into the combi can and trial mineral oil exclusively on this saw.

    See how many chains I get through this time.

      Stuart

     

     

     

     

    Stuart the aspen bio was the single worst bar oil I've used. Destroyed loads of bars. Make sure it's ok in the drums as it can go like jelly if not used up quickly. Tbh the stihl bio was the only one we ever got on with but at wear was always at least twice the rate of mineral oil. We had to switch back to mineral on bigger felling jobs especially saws like the 560s and 500i as the bio doesn't lubricate well enough on the faster saws. If your switching flush the oil tanks out on your saws with petrol as they don't mix well

    • Like 3
  2. No specifics but escape routes must be clear, properly retreat to a safe distance, watch for limbs in trees around the felled ones sheding, no manual wedges, Jack's or ratchet wedges only. Mechanized where possible, use winches to pull over to remove cutters from risk areas if needed. They barber chair like no tomorrow. And get them down sooner rather than later as they aren't fun when the start to go backwards fast. We are trying to avoid swapping sides of the tree so powerful saws that you can chase the hinge with, using bar length that allow you to cut from one side. Above all don't rush them spend the time assessing the tree. The canopy will give you a clue even in winter. Look for any signs of decay in the trunk. Even if you peel some bark off if you suspect it's dodgy. 

    • Like 4
  3. Vavja jussi is about the best. The Chinese/cheap copies aren't well made and all seem to develop crane issues early on. Just make sure when your talking about moving at reasonable forward speed anything that loads itself won't be greatly stable. If it's only smaller volumes then the logic trailers you hand load are very good and will tow anywhere you can get the quad to and stick a bit more speed running back to the yard.

    • Like 1
  4. On 26/09/2019 at 10:46, tothby1 said:

    Hi looking for tree shear for 5 ton bobcat with rotator . Any one using R S L 12 . or  good or bad . Not for every day use  

    not used the RSL but used a couple of other brands, the TMK is a great bit of kit, we run a TMK300 on my Kubota kx161, and its spot on straight from the box. If I was going out to buy one I would probably go for the 200 just due to the weight saving at full reach on the smaller base machines. We used an intermercato on a couple of ha holly clearance and tbh I wouldn't rush to get one. Blade kept coming off, wouldn't touch the size material it said it should put us off running one for a while as was slower than 2 lads on saws would have been.    

  5. 47 minutes ago, outinthewood said:

    0000 660 0801 That's the pt # for out side spike kit which is the match for the inner spike. At the moment there seems to be no bigger version listed and you'll maybe have to go for a set from a 462 if you want bigger. I've used a set from a 064 to give a set with better "bite" . Just get the dealer to double check that # ! 

    Cheers for that. Don't need bigger tbh the factory one works really nicely could just do with them being a pair. They are the best shaped spikes I've used on a saw in a good while

  6. Wider every time on sphagnum and peat. As wide as you can. If your on the clay then it's grip you need. I run a couple of sets on my alpine depending on the ground. Best compromise is a wider tyre with lots of grip (new basically)

     

    if the rims are 20" duals are available 2nd hand as a fairly common size for telehandlers and the like back in the day. I picked 2 sets up reasonably cheaply and these can run old tyres as they are just for flotation.  Size is 16.0 r20 or 405/70 r20 in modern terms 

  7. we cut 2.5m 3m and 3.7mtr depending on the straightness of the timber, the site conditions and extraction method. If your using the major pull them all to your loading area as poles and cross cut them there if the ground will hold up and you don't have a forwarder. Remember 3.7s mean a less cutting

     

    Beware of the timber being very unpredictable.

    Also best requesting to see info from the woodland owner e.g correspondence from FC relating to the permissions as even on sites with severe dieback you should still have some dialogue with you area officer if your England. 

     

    the volume could be quite significant so its worth considering getting a machine in for the extraction as the novelty of loading the atv trailer will wear of pretty fast

    • Like 2
  8. 14 hours ago, dig-dug-dan said:

     

    Any idea where I might be able to get this done, if indeed it is the problem? It may just be a bearing. I need to put it on the tractor and test it

    Frank Alviti at Ludlow, turned a rotor around for me in 48hrs and was significantly cheaper that has been quoted even with having it shipped back. Make sure the pto shaft isn't bent as that can also give significant vibration if its been bowed. Is the flail a Dragone? as they are well made

  9. Im currently working on a site where we could do with pulling a lot of firewood sized material to areas where we can skid with tractor or mini forwarder. 

     

    Has anyone used these smaller 2 or 4 stroke winches seriously in anger. I estimate we could be dealing with up to 100tons per winter. I've spoken several times with Treadlight forestry about the docma winches and that's the way im looking to go.  I just wondered if anyone else had used one extensively day in day out on larger jobs. Especially running several chokers on for short wood, and as a haulback for the bigger winch

  10. need a brash rake to clear up some areas where roots have been cleared out recently, its to go on an older jcb 1.4ton machine, any recommendations I have been looking at the digbits bucket rake rather than the hardox based one as it will only get used once in a blue moon and will only be used for raking and levelling a bit of soil. Anyone else using anything similar they care to recommend

     

    Cheers

     

    Charlie

  11. bought new protector pros last Oct and by Feb they were about ready for the bin, Most our felling is wet slopes so they do take some punishment but my last pair lasted 4 years, 4months I don't think is good enough. I will be trying a different brand next time. Would be interest if these are better but I will take some convincing

  12. Height above ground to the centre of the pto would be a great starting point please. The pto on the mower seems to be very high and we have had to push the mower forwards already about 6inchs to get the machine to fit as well as making a special top link. But when running the pto isnt at a great angle.

  13. I have a couple of questions relating to the front pto height if anyone is running either an Aebi or rasant could you drop me a pm. I've been trying to run rasant front implements on a reverse drive bcs and it appears there are some considerable geometry differences between the linkages on the two machines.

     

    Cheers Charlie

  14. Give Kilworth near Ashby a ring Ben, they hire out either an alpine with a nice heavy duty flail or a remote controlled one.

     

    I would say plan on mulching it a couple of times in the first year probably 2-3 and that should get you back to a reasonable amount of grass coming through then if needed you can spray out undesirables once you have a decent ride to walk through

     

    heres what an alpine can do on a site in 2 days just over a days skidding out the listed garden and a day on the flail, The garden was chest deep brambles and you couldn't walk through it,

     

    before and after

    10846121_10152823453900944_1664847689956929299_n.jpg.5b495b21478d16b40f11c8c298c6101d.jpg

    IMAG0412.jpg.be68a5de8cd7ddd0ce493fc9d994c4ed.jpg

    IMAG0411.jpg.5167fa373ba03b31f79d29cc9fa7319f.jpg

  15. I run one on my 372xp that came direct from my local dealer, when I was felling riverside trees and having to hold it in some different positions

     

    Im intrigued what application you need one for on the 560? as you cant flush stumps down easily with them on (recon on a good 4" taller stumps with the 372 with full wraps) and unless your running a long bar on it, they aren't ideal for snedding.

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