Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

david

Member
  • Posts

    487
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by david

  1. ye thats part of the reason i jacked in being a spark, spent all my time pulling in cables in hot factorys. driving them would be ok till the movelty wore off id think
  2. iv worked in there for about 6 months. your right it is a hot noisey place but those rolles of paper are massive
  3. Service Metals-Aluminium and steel profiles supplier-Fabrication you got any pictures of your mog?
  4. just a thought, can you pull it out and burn it in a small controled pile
  5. Im sure you know to slow down when you hear the engine start to loose revs. i have found in the past that when you change mowers because they cut at a different hight from the previous one that they really strugle the frist couple of times you cut an area.
  6. TP will be what your loking for. good chippers ima
  7. iv seen it done with simple box section that slides over the existing drawbar and you just drop a pin in threw the hole on the existing drawbar to fix the longer drawbar in place hope this makes sence
  8. sounds about right to me too. depends on what your cutting and how hard your pushing the hydrostatic pedel. that was part of the reason i changed to a diesel mower when i got more work for the ride on.
  9. surely your not going to pull them out to the road side with a tirfor?
  10. is it still running rough? or is it the amount of petrol its using? (roughly how much per hour)
  11. wird, dass die Hunde Kugeln Ich wette werden. Haben Sie nicht vor Ihrem Clip Schritt weg, Rasseln mir wie die Hölle, wenn seine nicht weg.
  12. nice mog sieht ordentlich. ist, dass eine Seilwinde an der Front?
  13. nice veiws aber können wir sehen, bitte Ihren Unimog
  14. sounds a bit dear to me. have you any pictuces of where its going?
  15. i know! barrow bags on a roof rack
  16. if it were me id get a bigger trailer or a cheap old pickup. i wouldnt be tempted to mess up that nice landy by unbolting it all to swap the right panels in. course this is just my opinion but id be tempted to spend my money in other ways
  17. think its 350kg on the flat and 250kg on hills but really you wont get that on it with that body. goes up any hill fully loaded too. good to see your saving your back and getting some use out your wee barrow steve
  18. ac price will post if that saves hassel. failing that any merc truck or car garage will can get the bits, but theres a better chance derick at ac price will know wat your talking about and have it sitting there waiting when you need it
  19. iv never used one befor either but would be warey of the H+S aspects, especially if you had staff working it. remember u need a way of switching the tractor off from the rear they do look good tho on long straight stuff [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Q0HJGWPTXE]YouTube - Stickler wood splitter kegelspalter 2[/ame] Screw Type Log Splitter wood splitter NEW on eBay (end time 17-May-10 13:31:40 BST)
  20. yes just keep going in ever decreasing circles. and split the last wee bit to save turning as much near the end oh and always turn inward not outward (youl can get that wee bit next time) sometimes i feel like im always going in ever decreasing circles
  21. is that a 200t there using. lol when im feeling flush i think il be ordering a 300. look so handy:thumbup1:
  22. i know what you mean my kabouta k008 has the ram on the top side, its a far better design
  23. simple idea but works. you need to be able to adjust the length so the bucket and thumb line up nice and also so the thumb cant reach and damage the lifting ram (the one that lifts the whole digging arm)
  24. i work with the thumb type on my 3 tonne. i pull out a fair bit of gorse by the roots no problem as you can grab the wee stumps well. think mine was about £250, money well spent id say.

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.