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Dan Curtis

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Everything posted by Dan Curtis

  1. The gate is inside. Works great for me and in about a year doing it, I've only made holes in two very thin t shirts Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  2. A snap in my shirt collar does the trick. I find LOTS tedious, chest loops too bra like and I don't think it's very clever to put anything around your neck up a tree. Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  3. Ime, they're pretty poor build quality. We had one snap in half on the a frame. Then on further inspection it had done it before about 6 inches further back. Horribly balanced on the axle so it was a pig to tow compared to others. They chip Ok, but unless you're being offered an amazing deal I'd try to go for a different brand Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  4. Thanks. I got it second hand from another contractor. I don't know where he got it from. I saw some similar riko trailers at the show last weekend, they look the part if you can afford one! Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  5. I should be up there Thursday to Saturday working again. Be good to see some of the faces
  6. Have you considered recycling them? This company will do it, they have depots all over the country Tree Guard Recycling from Agricycle
  7. Beech takedown yesterday then getting all the wood out and loaded into other trucks and trailers this morning. Just made it off site before the rain started
  8. Hahhaaaa Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  9. Four days to go until the competition. Work is already underway for the 10th year of the competition. Hopefully lots of new faces coming to join the fun
  10. To continue the pickiness, you can't have a decimal place on an imperial measurement
  11. If possible, move any moveable targets, heras fence the whole lot off and wait a few months. Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  12. Rig as normal generally. The only thing I find different is if you're redirecting your own line and the rigging line. It's just a case of working it out at the time Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  13. Charles Hill in Lincolnshire used to have a lot of old stock parts. They'd be worth a try Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  14. As in 3:1? You can do that with the ring too, one of its many perks
  15. I'd go for Sorbus. Took a lot down doing la contracting and they often had that orange colouring Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  16. Yes, but without unfavorable loading on anything. I know all the things about ropes braking before the krab would but the ring is there anyway so I use it
  17. Oh, I thought it should be viewable. It's just a bit quicker the the standard......Standard was cutting in around 4.25 seconds. Ported with the special bar and chain is around 2.65 seconds. Happy days!
  18. Oh yeah, I take my spikes off once I've got an anchor point
  19. Where to start.... Most dismantles I do these days are for a structural reason with the tree. Because of this I walk up on spikes checking the way the tree feels, looking for decay/weak spots etc. Also, it's a much less strenuous access method than climbing rope. For this I have a ring spliced into the end of my rope, I can do changeovers by passing the ring around the stem, pulling a bight through it and clipping a revolver into the bight. This gives me a bail out option at any time and means no tying/untying of knots to changeover. Once I get to my final TIP, I can tie in. I'll then get my kind groundsman to pull a couple more metres of rope from my bag and tie it to my rope. This extra gives me an allowance for redirects (more can be added at any time). It also means that I can easily move the tail of my rope to avoid dropping things on it. Work the tree like normal but with a thought to redirects you may need to keep to get to a certain part before smashing the canopy off. Back to the stem I swap over to the ring and revolver again, gives you the bailout option if needed. Others tie retrievable tie ins so you can descend a couple of metres before taking the system down and knocking a length off. Personally I don't bother, I just unclip the main line and spike down, resetting it when I'm at the next cutting point. Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  20. No worries. I don't know about masterclass but I can show you a thing or two Sent from my GT-I9505 using Arbtalk mobile app
  21. There used to be a lot over the Fens, alongside the A17. There haven't been as many the last few years though. Maybe someone who drives the road regularly could tell you
  22. I thought you might be interested in this Spud, one of yours
  23. Bit of comparison
  24. If a 550 doesn't break chains there's hope for this then, good to hear. Dime tip...I think I've got the terminology wrong there, I just meant it's a little tiny nose sprocket, compared to the usual. 18"on a 200 sounds an interesting combo. If you need anyone to test it out for you...
  25. Yeah, you can leave the base anchor attached but top anchor in higher without worrying about extra forces created by the base anchor. I usually carry 2x anchor rings, 2x revolvers, 1x 30cm sling and krab. I rarely use more than two redirects at a time and with those peices I can have 2/3 static redirects and/or 2 static and one dynamic. In the picture, to get on the tips of the lowest branch, DdRT you'd ideally need to be in the dark blue anchor point. Srt, you could be on any of them, and use redirects in the branches to give yourself a more secure work position. If you imagine there's 6m between the dark blue and light blue anchors, and you've thrown the light blue on a base anchor. You could get up to it, lanyard into the next limb, climb up, set a dynamic redirect, swap over to your lanyard again, put in a static redi, work the top of the tree, then as you come back down take the dynamic redirect off to use later and go about your buisiness from a static, single loaded top TIP, with base anchor backup. You can still come out the tree on the base anchor once you've taken the top part off and retreive your rope easily. Does that make sense? I know it seems complicated and a bit of hassle but in practice it's only a minute or two's work.

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