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Chris Sheppard

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Everything posted by Chris Sheppard

  1. Think it's something to do with the band brake - have seen a few with the bungee on so am intrigued too. Cutting Edge uk have them and there was somone else in the UK I found on google but can't remember who off top of my head. Last time I priced one the were about £850 inc vat for the winch, adaptors and cable. @BigBolt - what mods have you done to the 362's oil pump so it doesn't go pop? I'd be looking to shove my 372 on it but might still want to fell with it from time to time too. Asked cutting edge at the APF and they were unsure what was the best approach. Also, how do people get on with mounting the saw indirect (so with an outboard clutch?)
  2. I admire your enthusiasm and wish you the best of luck but fear your may be trying to create a business by doing nothing more than throwing money at it. If you've no experience of the actual work side of it in a working situation, then I'd suggest doing that before anything else - how you may imagine it in your head is not necessarily how it will be in real life. Also, no amount of qualifications will make up for experience, so start small. Like Ed said, CS30 and 31 is a good start.
  3. Depends what he'll be using it for, but Husky's current 50cc pro saw is the 550xp. BTW, you do know you've opened that can of worms again, don't you
  4. It's a whole lot too far for me to come but I'd be keen to hear your findings as I'm currently torn between the lewis and the honda capstan ones. Give it some stick and let me know if it takes it
  5. Yes, I can see what you mean - perhaps not the best wording. I was getting more towards that someone caught speeding is less likely to have a criminal conviction from it, whereas other illegal things could be more likely to end up with a criminal conviction.
  6. Dropped by the local Echo dealer today in the hope of getting a good lokk at one, but they didn't have one in stock unfortunately. The new version is the 2800es (or something similar) and they're offering it at £240 all in which didn't seem too bad. Queried bar lengths, comes with 12" as standard but he ran the part numbers for the 10" and 8" and they are showing as available, but the best bit is an 8" bar is nearly £80 (and that is just the bar - no chain!). Still quite fancy one though
  7. I think these would be the striped vented, the panels are made up of webbing with venty stuff in between.
  8. Agreed. We recently aquired some bags which measured 150x90x90 - I make that 1.215 cubic metres. We filled one up and compared it to some bags which we know to hold 0.8 cubic metres. The big bag held at least the same as two of the 0.8 bags.
  9. I'm not defending drinking though - never understood the whole drinking to excess thing. Managed to get that out the system by the time I hit 20. Can't bide people smoking near me either. THUD: I've just realised - I'm a narrow minded grumpy old man 30 years early
  10. We do a bt of a mixture of work through the year but from Feb to August usually we are out in the woods more than not. On the whole we get the sites that harvesters either couldn't work or wouldn't be worth bringing in due to the volumes. We get a good variety of stuff from first thin small diameter firewood to oversize stag topped pines and everything in between. Price wise, I think the best way is to cut out as many middlemen as possible, everyone taking a cut is meaning the guys actually doing the work are getting less and less. The demand for firewood and biomass has helped a lot the last couple of years, though it's also pushed standing prices up a bit too. We always emphasise that the cheaper someone wants the job doing for, the more mess there will be left behind. I think there's an awful lot of younger arb guys who think that felling in the woods is easy - they are wrong. Simples Yes, Forestry and Arb both involve chainsaws and trees, but on the whole that's about it for similarities. Yes, getting the trees on the floor may be fairly straight forward, but doing it quickly and efficiently and presenting it tidily, and on more valuable stems, getting them down without smashing/tearing them, are things some people will never get there head round. More often that not, they'll start to tire and start taking shortcuts - leaving the undersides with branches on, guessing lenghts, leaving toes on, stumps getting higher, timber thrown onto stacks, etc - it can't work like that. I know I'm never going to make arb money in the woods, but I'm happy doing what I do, earn enough to keep moving forward and get to have an odd rest day doing arb jobs
  11. I think I know what you mean; does it almost look like the plastic has split along the join and the short bit just in front that the AV spring is attached to, is moving? If so, every 357 I've used/owned/seen does it after a while. It doesn't seem to get any worse and I've never known one snap. I've looked about at different huskies with a similar looking tank/handle and they are all slightly different and don't seem to suffer the same.
  12. Phew, someone else see's it the same way What worries me the most is the number of people who seem to feel the need to defend drug use
  13. Motoring convictions aren't criminal convictions though are they?
  14. £229's best I've seen so far so not much in it That was the Titan Pro website. Will get those measurements sorted for the Yew sorted shortly - am a bit further behind than where I hoped to be by now so couldn't measure it all in situ
  15. On the whole, my experiences of ebay have been pretty good too. Do like the look of that Holder too
  16. Cheers guys Am fancying one for those really light jobs where a normal small saw is a bit overkill. The 550's great but almost a bit too lively for some jobs, and a bit thirsty. We've been doing a bit of formative pruning/cleaning the last few weeks and been using 242's and 42's and they're great too but can't elp bt feel a tiny saw could just fill a bit of a gap from time to time.
  17. Absolutely. I might not agree with bits of it but it's still about things I find interesting so no doubt I'll watch it again Bet that old guy could still give plenty of us a run for our money - he might not move as fast but he'll make every movement count
  18. Any update on how the little echo is performing, Charlie? Really quite fancy one
  19. I'd take softwood over certain hardwoods without thinking about it, but ultimately owt will burn if it's dry.
  20. Know you're a stihl fan, but I really rate the big husky one HUSQVARNA 325HD75x - Hedge trimmers Don't know what the real price is but I'd have thought most dealers will be around £400 if they know you. Hedgecutting isn't my favourite job but that just eats it up. Will take fairly thick stuff too.
  21. Sorry, yes - meant transfer ports. Was thinking more along the lines of some of the better semi pro saws where they are pretty much just open ported pro saws (353/359/2159/42) I still have a 357 and a 372 barrel sat on the shelf which both need the ali transfer cleaning off and if they aren't fubared, hopefully one day will get as far as sending for some spudding
  22. Wonder if he thought it was an autolube tank for the 2 stroke? I've heard that one before
  23. Can see what you mean, but if we think some landowners are hard to deal with already, imagine what it'd be like dealing with those with tiny woodlands full of rubbish that they think they will make a mint out of. Can hear it now - "I know what I'm talking about, I've seen it on the telly"
  24. Jut watched this on iplayer and thought it was OK to a point. Think the main thing we're forgetting is that most of us on here only make up a tiny tiny proportion of the people who watched it and that we were always going to pick fault. Thought the old guy who went felling with him was ace - tell he was a proper woodboss as it looked like his mitts and helmet had been dug out of the back of the shed specially for the cameras My worry is that, a bit like with the Kevin Mcloud thing, there's suddenly going to be a run of more wealthy people fancy a go and start pushing the price of woodland up further than it aready is and also start to see bigger blocks broke down into much smaller bits for peoples weekend woodland garden getaways. Some might think that's no bad thing but I'm not convinced.
  25. Can open ported saws be ported or would the effort outweigh the benefits? At the other end of the scale, I'd really like to find myself in a position where I could send you a 242 for porting - it'd be interesting to see how much more revvy it could be made

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