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Brushcutter

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Everything posted by Brushcutter

  1. I've seen ring barking mentioned in a couple of books i have on fruit tree pruning. I did a fruit tree pruning course a few years back and they mentioned it too. The only experence i have of it was working in a community garden where each year the people strimming always gave the base of the trees a fair bit of damage. The trees very in very good shape considering and never needed much pruning and always produced a good crop.
  2. Humm a 4x4 thats good on insurance, reliable and not going to cost a fortune to run. Oh and good for a 22 year old to drive. Thats a long list of asks you'll have to comprimise on one of thoes. A classic landy series 2 or something would be on a classic insurance policy and wold be tax exempt i think. Down side it will drink a lot of petrol. When i got my D22 Navara at 23 it was 1200 quid to insure!
  3. I was wondering wether you had a harvester in for a job at £15 standing. Cope well on the hardwoods? Much of a market for 5' dbh hardwoods?
  4. Nice. How much is that going for.
  5. Some of the FC site here are looking for big money for the timber. £15 standing isn't too bad what sort of dbh was all of that. I have no idea what Beech sawlogs go for but it must be a lot to warrent £55 a tonne standing.
  6. Nice bit of coppice there. You could use the dead wood and lop and top to fence the stools you've cut to protect them from deer. That larger diameter stuff would make good charcoal that you could do in an old oil drum. Be a good thing to sell a the car boot. Good guide how to do that in the BTCV woodlands book.
  7. Its a very very good camera. Just wait till you put a lense on that for 1500 quid
  8. Effectivly a harvester head on a bed that sits on the 3pl of a tractor. You either winch or grapple feed trees in and proudct comes out.
  9. Give Fletchers a ring and they have the number of the new dealers.

  10. When i first saw this i thought £3 a cube. You'd probally win it at that. £6-8 quid you be picking up some rather nice standing hardwoods for that.
  11. Being in Cornwall is it a load of windblow SOD Larch?
  12. Will you be using the wood for firewood or selling it to a mill. Did a triple chestnut windblow the other day which took the best part of 3 hours to get it ready on the winch dug out dressed and ready for the mill. They were some 80cm dbh but thats still slow going.
  13. I'd of thought 28" would have been the biggest you could put on that saw. For best cutting results i'd say 20-24"
  14. Fletchers are nolonger a supplyer for kwikchip parts. At least they thats what they said 3 months ago when i rang them for parts for the profi431. Apparently they've been taken over by a french company. Fletchers gave me the number of the guys who deal with it now but i could never get hold of them. I needed feed roller bearings but i got them from my agri dealer in the end as patent parts.
  15. I'd be looking to pay less than standing as there is much more work and cost involved in doing it. If access for a forwarder is a pain that puts up the cost of getting it out. Is it windblown softwood? Not all trees will need a a winch attached but if you have to do it with a turfor its a long slow process. Also the ones on the deck will more than likely need digging out to get a saw in all takes time. Even with an axe to remove some of the crappy bark you'll likely hit some crap and dull the chain. If you get the site its worth considering getting someone in to do CS34/35 certs if you and your lads don't have them. As site to do them are hard to come by and the FC are keen for you have them to work on their sites.
  16. cool. The felling of the spar made an impressive thud.
  17. I hate replacing pipe i once managed to hook all four pipes to the rotor round a bolster and rip them all off. Took all day to get that fixed. Managed to get a windblow across the traielr on monday (bloody close) which took off the oil filter which has taken all week to fix. Parts arived yesterday but they were wrong as i have the only non standard mish mash boxter trailer ever.
  18. Video not working:(
  19. Roof mounts without an opperator could be a disaster make sure who ever is using it has FMO. Or you could find you tractor on its side or the crane sheared off the roof. I've hurd forwarding rates being as low a £5a m3 closer to a tenner would be safer. I priced up a new Valtra N111 Forestry cab, guarded and with a roof mount Botex 570TL with 11 tonne trailer. That was about 67K. At 7 quid a cube thats 9571 to pay for its self. let alone your time
  20. Most winches are 3pl mouted. With the exception of a few double drum winches. I have a 6.5t double drum and for what i do i wouldn't want to go any smaller. Forestry conversions are expensive as there is a lot of steel involved. That has a belly plate, front guard, brush bars, and the cage round the cab. Side windows are guarded too. Should really do the back window to be proper guarded up. The belly plate is the most expensive bit as its 3mm steel all under the thing. With holes in where filters and bits of gubbins you need to get to are. These have plates bolted over them.
  21. Lot of bad fuel going around at the moment. My dad got a load of fuel from BP in Biggleswade which caused something to go wrong with the sensor in the cat. Ment the car went wrong. Apparently this has been happening a lot with Saabs at the moment. As for compsensation for Sainsburys. One of my dads staff got some bad fuel from tesco and got a huge repair bill. They wrote to them and got a standard letter back saying not our fault. Later they got a letter saying they will pay for repairs, the tank of fuel and got some vouchers too because over 200 people had the same problem.
  22. It's worth getting a tracker and using stuff that shows up under UV to mark it somewhere out of site. I had a big bit of RSJ that padlocked onto the floor and on that was wealded a ball hitch which the chipper was locked onto. Also had some heavy guage lifting chain (that was very difficult to cut with a angle grinder) chaining it to the walls of a shipping container.

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