Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Chris Sheppard

Veteran Member
  • Posts

    3,827
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Chris Sheppard

  1. I found the opposite - I thought the triggers, choke, front handle etc were quite tough - but fairly bulky. To be fair though that was on a saw that is best part of 10 years old now so the newer ones might be a bit more flimsy. (was still running well when I sold it last year too )
  2. My first saw was a jonsered 2163, I bought it second hand, used it pretty much everyday for thinnings and firewood and it performed pretty faultlessly. Many parts are husky but a few quirky little bits (front handles as mentioned before by someone) and were a little bit "numb" compared to the equivalent husky. Reliability wise I don't think there's anything in it but handlin wise the Husky just beats it IMO
  3. Keeping on Hiluxes - My old one
  4. I'd love another bike, did a few H&H and a couple of MX before I went to college then sold me bike (97 CR 125) and never got round to getting another. Haven't even sat on a bike in 7 years and SWMBO won't let me buy another one now
  5. I tried the free sample in my 372 wasn't overly keen and it went through the tank very quickly - almost drained the oil tank each fill up even with the pump turned right down. Chain used to get quite hot too. Still think the Oregon Super Saw chain oil is the best IMO
  6. Agree with everyone re the staffy, but reckon theres some sort of longdog in there - them lugs definately have a bit of a whippet look to them if you look for long enough lol I think (no doubt I'll get shot to bits for this) there's a bit of patterdale in there - it's got those lines on it's brow i've only seen on stocky pattys.
  7. The trailer behind the Carraro is the little one that the Canadians market as the quadbike one - it was one of the first ones brought over (even before Lee sold them - a friend of mine imported one to see what the market was going to be like and I used to hire the trailer off him as and when) The kit I used to run did go quite a way towards me getting the job with Carraro/Riko Your 450 Honda might be able to pull it but it would be too heavy to use it safely on anything other than flat sites and then would probably be heavier than the handbook would allow. It does go quite nicely behind bigger ATVs, Mules, ausas, kubota RTV etc or big capacity Quads. That trailer with 2.7m crane and petrol powerpack is £6850 plus vat.
  8. I'd looked at doing something similar but on a smaller scale using to old calor gas bottles that fitted inside each other - wanted to burn all the offcuts from the showjumps and heat the shed over winter with radiators so paint would dry. Ed, we had a farm 2000 at the laste estate I worked on (not sure what size if there's different models) - used to tip a 6tonne grain trailer of chunks every couple of weeks over winter for them and it would burn whatever you threw in it - this was all the crap that wouldn't go into the firewood or had wire, nails in it - and they used to heat an outdoor pool with it - well good boiler imo.
  9. Wish it was still that low round us - £25-28 depending on quality - there's still and awful lot of s**t about and a proper shortage.
  10. I don't disagree - however there will alway be a need for smaller equipment - you wouldn't drag an 880 up a tree every time.
  11. Who's - mine?
  12. PM sent I'm not sure about the Alstor or Vimek mini forwarders but with or small scalle stuff we deal with all ends of the market from Forestry contractors, Arb companies, Coppice workers, Willdife trusts, FC, Natural England, Woodland Trust etc and yes there's always a few who just want something to use in their wood. Small stuffs never going to compete tonne for tonne, but on some sites you either can't or won't get bigger machinery in - it's like anything - putting the right machine on the right job.
  13. Yep, we do, there's a shiney new one in the yard at the moment
  14. These were my two - worked quite well side by side.
  15. Used to always use husky ones - tried a stihl one, put the husky ones on ebay, bought stihl ones and never looked back
  16. Chris Sheppard

    canada2 277

    From the album: pics

  17. Chris Sheppard

    canada1 062

    From the album: pics

  18. Chris Sheppard

    canada1 027

    From the album: pics

  19. Chris Sheppard

    canada 233

    From the album: pics

  20. Chris Sheppard

    canada 043

    From the album: pics

  21. Hi David,

     

    Thanks for the welcome!

     

    I'd spent 4 years or so doing my own things - felling for other people, looking after my own firewood on a couople of esates and a few jobs completely of my own but couldn't get decne tguys to help out - got fed up of the travelling and costs of everything kept getting bigger so decided to go employed on a local Estate - hated every minute of it - the head woodman had only got there because the others kept retiring and he thought he knew everything. We kept falling out and I'd had enough - I'd dealt with Riko previously when I was contracting and got chatting to them at one of the shows this summer and he said I've got a job that would just suit you - and here I am.

     

    I do miss the woods in many ways but I think I needed a change, even if it's only for a while.

  22. The rocking beam one uses leaves, the only beam axles available at the time for the other version were unfortunately not leafed.
  23. Depends what you're after but I'm sure we can sort something Also, I may be wrong, but I think Lee has stopped selling JMS products now.
  24. Something some of you seem to be forgetting is the nose weight of the trailer with the crane fitted - one of the reason the Riko ones are the price they are is because the whole bed slides backwards/forwards to get the nose weight right. Even the 2.7m JMS crane weighs in at 326kg and that's the small one! There's a lot more goes into building them than just cobbling a crane on. There's also two different axle variants available -indespension type and full rocking beam - both fully braked and sprung - the indespension works out much cheaper. Before anyone says owt - yes I do work for Riko and no this aint a plug just my 2p worth
  25. If it's anything like my Hawk was it's only a 5 minute job to sort, though I'm not sure if with the 1 X you need to take the infeed belt off to get at it. Take the top cover off, theres a lever that the splitting ram casing (can't think of a better way to describe it) hits as it goes past each way and that's what sets the ram returning and then stops it on it's return stroke. Set it running with the cover off (keep out of the way though) so you can see the bit of the ram you don't normally see and you'll see how the lever works - mine used to sometimes not quite hit the lever so not reset itself - it's been a while since I had it in bits but theres an adjuster for the bit that sets it going (mine was a bar with slots in it - slacken the two bolts and slide the plate up a bit - trial and error seemed to work with mine and from memory it didn't need much adjustment to sort it. Hope that helps.

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.