Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Brushcutter

Veteran Member
  • Posts

    3,310
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Brushcutter

  1. The 150 is about 1.5t so i doubt the 250 is much more maybe 2t. That 150 is on a 90hp there. Works very well, so a 250 on a fent 930 will be 250hp ish at the pto. It will chip like a beast and shoult have no problem picking it up. even with its ridiculous width.
  2. I don't think it will be that easy to find one. They are absolutely massive by the way. Unless you need the giant in feed the 150 does the same job. If you do find one if it hasn't got a sliding headstock get one made up or you will be constantly breaking cars and street furniture driving the thing around.
  3. They are hard. I use a bench mounted belt sander to get them good. TBH I've found they don't burr up too much.
  4. Many many years ago there was a little botex purpose built forwarder. I think they only made 2.
  5. I like the 576. It's a monster on an 18" bar if a little back heavy. Balances up nicely on a 20" though and pulls a 24" nicely in hardwood. I had the heated handle version well worth the extra 50 quid. I prefer it to the 372 as the vibes felt lower. Until the 560 came along the 576 was a big jump form the 357 but now the 560 is that good unless you need the longer bar then i'd stick with that.
  6. Who did you use for that? Anyone local?
  7. Nice to see you Ian. Did you see the little kid with the mullet.
  8. Big stick there Matt. Wont be picking that up with the roof mount
  9. Exhausted from worry most likely.
  10. A lot of the timber left to harvest is now in bloody awkward places. Where unless your a proud owner of a Tigercat with massive climbing cleets on your tracks you aren't machine cutting it. So you're left with winching it or skylining it. Extraction methods still practiced but where it was once a mainstay it's now rather specialist. This of course then leads you to having to find someone with the skills to cut for this extraction method. Your no doubt having to then secondary extract it so it's just too expensive to harvest. So we then get to the stage where we're sub £3 on mechanical harvesting standing 'easy' timber. Then this sits at roadside drying out because for some reason we sell by weight rather than through the head.
  11. I've never seen so many harvesters for sale. I saw a whole outfit for sale a little while ago. I've seen a lot of timber on the move but very few sites opening up. Seen a real downturn in the training side too.
  12. After dragging it across a lawn of dog eggs.
  13. The MSA 160 which is the battery version of the MS150. Absolutely love it don't use it often but its a lovely little saw. As long as you have two batteries and the capacity to charge them if it's a big tree then its great. Quite too.
  14. Do you cut the holding wood underneath like you would in a pie cut as that's what i do. Out of interest why do you prefer the pie cut? I find you can throw the trees around a lot more with the split level.
  15. I do mainly felling so it's a bit different. You've got to get down to the ground to fell it so bar length is a little irrelevant. If you set up a good bench then that brings it up to a nice working height. When it's down on the floor the bar can be a little short my back is telling me a 560 with an 18" maybe a worth while investment.
  16. 1. 550xpg 2. 346xpg 3. 254xpg 4. 357xpg 5. 372xpg Enough said really.
  17. My 550xpg its just so nice on a 13" bar.
  18. It really depends on what you want to do with the tractor and cash flow management. Leasing is great when you know your tractor is going to cost you 20K a year with all the servicing done as well. For farming i think it works better i feel as you are getting the latest tech on the tractor every 3 years or so. Other thing is that putting the crane and guarding on a lease tractor maybe a little awkward. How many HP are you looking at 200?
  19. I too think it's the PTO wire that hangs out the back. They get knocked around come loose and give problems. Seen it happen on a 8000 series i assume its the same on the 6000.
  20. Have a look at training in Sweden. They tend to run international courses once a years for a few months. You might be better off finding someone with a valtra/botex set up to let you have a go to learn. They are slow and forgiving unlike the purpose built that have lightening fast cranes. You'll find that you'll need 6 months to a year to get fairly proficient with the crane and stacking. To be able to do all the things that make a good forwarder driver and multi brand forwarder driver will take you a couple of years. Oh and that's doing the crappy forwarder driver hours too.
  21. This must be done. MB winching action.
  22. How does it pull that loaded?
  23. For the best fluid movement get an electro set up. Means you'll have a valve chest either tucked under the Jake or up on the roof. However with the ability to program the movements at the speed you want makes life quick and simple. Also its much less had work than the chunky Botex leavers.However it does add about 5-7k on the price. It's more to retrofit though. Kronos Mowi M series Kelsa Farma G2 Their in no order but all worth looking at. It's APF in September so they'll all be there to have a look at.

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.