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Chris Sheppard

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Everything posted by Chris Sheppard

  1. I used to really like the Husky Pro lights but they must ahve stopped making them. Quite an old style but quite light and airy and really hard wearing. Just bought a pair of the husky technical type A's with the zipped vents in the back and after a week of wearing them in the wood they don't look like they'll last very long - the stretchy material has bits pulled already and the stitching across the knees is taking a beating. The vents are good, but because they are quite a close fittign trouser, the fronts of the legs are still quite warm, certainly no cooler than the old pro lights, but the vents do seem to help keep your nuts cooler All in all though I'm quite dissappointed and have a feeling they will be going back under warranty very soon
  2. I'd agree, we had one in a 35c14 and it didn't use that much more fuel when it was loaded and towing than it did empty - and it towed amazingly
  3. Me and Buzzsurgeon went on a little road trip this week and came back with this. Today was it's first proper outing and so far it's done everything we've asked of it and it lifts better than we expected it to so all in all very pleased
  4. Bum - that's kinda confirming what I was kinda hoping it wouldn't be Just bought a forwarding trailer and had our offer accepted on our first house too so the new saw funds a bit low
  5. my trusty 353 has developed a bit of an odd symptom in that it'll be running fine and then intermittently develop a fast idle which might last a minute or two, or might last the rest of the tank, and doesn't do it all the time - might be fine for a couple of days or might do it a few times a day. The speed isn't high enough to start the chain creeping but is definitely a lot faster than it should be and isn't something silly liek the throttle sticking. I've always used the same 2 stroke oil in it and always used the same mix. It's a 2004 model and initially had quite a hard life thinning every day but it's always kept going with very little work needed doing. I am planning to replace it shortly but would like to try and keep it going a bit longer. I did wonder if it might be an air leak maybe, but didn't think this would show itself intermittently anyone got any suggestions for what to have a look at?
  6. What you'll probably find with a compact as small as 18-20 hp is that it won't have an awful lot of weight over the front axle so you'll find it a pig to steer with a decent snig on, especially as trying to drive a little tractor on the independents while wearing chainsaw boots is a challenge as the pedals are often tiny. If you can stretch to it, you could look at somethign even just a bit bigger at 25-30hp but be able to pull a good chunk more, or even look at an old classic 2wd - we used to use a foord 3000 with 3 tonne winch on one estate and it would go most of where we needed it to, all we did was put some wider front tyres on so it didn't dig in as bad. The pic below shows what can be done with a small tractor - thats 30hp and we've had bigger snigs on than that
  7. Good find And for all of us non-arbs, there's even a forestry section found this one for the forestry lot too
  8. That one of Stevies is a hell of a machine, it used to be mine and I only ever found one piece of wood it wouldn't split on the first go.
  9. Left school didn't know really what I wanted to do, worked in a garage for a few months, then went christmas tree dragging, followed by some planting and then started putting chains on for the skidder followed by starting a bit of felling. Realised I'd found what I wanted to do but was already down to go to college for gamekeeping. Scrape through the course, picke up cs30 and 31 on the way and went straight back in the woods. about a year after leaving college went self employed, cutting for a few different estates, started picking up my own sites, bought a County, bought an alpine tractor, bought some firewood machinery but in the end got fed up of working on my own all the time. Tried hiring some staff, didn't work out so packed in and ended up on the books for a forest machinery sales company, did two years or so of that and decided I knew what I really wanted to be doing so left last november and been back in the woods since, feeling the best I have for a long time
  10. proper gusty up here at the mo
  11. I'm interested to see what suggestions people come up with as I'm looking to burn a bit of charcoal too as one of the woods we're working in at the mo is rammed full of stuff too small to firewood. Having moved a kiln a few weeks ago by hand, I'd say a quad could be a good move as we nearly got flattened a couple of times when the kiln hit bumps or we got to hills, though it was a fair size so a smaller one might be easier to handle I'd have thought a decent sized dropside trailer would be a sensible choice for behind the defender as then you can lead good amounts off site, though if you were to use a quad for extraction and moving the kiln into the position then you may need to look at a smaller traielr to use too, even if just on site. I've heard of a few people using firewood processors to fill the kilns too - rather than cutting by hand and stacking neatly, just bang it all through the processor and save a lot of time.
  12. Bought a pair of these on Thursday, having pretty much just worn Husky/jonsered pro-lights I was a little dubious of going for something made of stretchy material that didn't feel that tough. A day in, and so far so good. Vents are really great, the first waft of cold air was a bit odd but over the course of the day really seemed to make a difference. Took a bit of getting used to them being a tighter fit and stretching as you move but didn't feel like they were a hindrance. Would like to have seen the thicker material taken right down to the ankles and round the back (like on the stihl ones) but can't have it all. Just hope they last as long as the old Pro-lights
  13. looking good Hopefully we can have a couple of chickens if we get moved to where we're looking at.
  14. That's expensive firewood then
  15. That looks so wrong it looks right
  16. You're more patient than me then - I'd want more CC's than that, ringing up's boring Personally I'd probably not go bigger than 15" on it if it's a bit tired
  17. In comarison to other European countries, very small. But from what I can see it is growing all the time.
  18. the 3500 is the small one, which I think is now the 360 - though chances are the 3500 could be a bit shorter. I'd be very surprised if that crane would lift 2 tonne at 2 metres.
  19. Husky 357 for an all rounder, much lighter than a 440 or a husky 372 but bags of power still. Will pull an 18" bar in most timber at a good speed.
  20. 357's a funny one, I'd happily pick one up to cut the same trees I'd take my 372 to, yet it feels not that much bigger than a 346. But that said, I'd not put a bar bigger than 20" onto the 372, anything bigger and I'd be reaching for 90cc plus
  21. That stack is by hand, the stack on the right hand side in the other photo were with the loader, generally anything that was to big to handball. We're still tryign to get sorted with a second hand trailer, but got more chance of finding rocking horse poo I've had a couple of Jonsereds in the past, that 2163 was my first saw and it was second hand when I got it, and ran perfectly in the few years I had it until I sold it when I went employed. What I did find though was although the ran like a husky, they just didn't feel the same, things like the front handles being slightly different angle and the triggers being a differnet shape - they just felt a bit numb.
  22. You don't, the 660 is great Don't mind the 395 husky but prefer the 660. every other saw would be a husky though (can't comment on top handles as don't climb)
  23. Stihl for show; Husky for Pro I'm going to be controversial and throw in a curveball - Jonsered Loads of the old guys round here used to run them as they were cheap to stay on track, if you squint hard enogh you can just make out the old school husky hanging off the winch, and the edge of my trusty 353 after some mild stunt felling. I've nothing against Stihl, and for big timber would take a 660 every day of the week, but for that instant zap for snedding I don't think you can beat a husky.

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