doobin
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Everything posted by doobin
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You could always have a power tilt quick hitch and be able to tilt any bucket, but not cheap.
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Grapple for a 1.7t is nice and light. My hydraulic grab is much heavier, more suited to the 2.7t. Id have a 9” bucket too. Yes bobcat can get the buckets from the manufacturer and add them to the finance deal. They might try to convince you to have a whites hitch, but can get hardford too.
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You mean like my land rake and clay spade? Used once and never respectively ?
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Yeah, hire kit is always shagged. Unless it’s from somewhere like travis Perkins, then it’s just a rip off. Far better to own. If you can sign with bobcat before the end of the month it’s 5 years 0%. Had a price for an e19 with cab last week, £18.5k. E17 canopy would be a fair bit cheaper I should think. I like ratchet type hitches like the hardford wedgelock. Keeps everything tight. A ripper tooth is always useful. Flail, no, not really. Sort of, but not much use. Just don’t have the flow. Get at your buckets with blades and teeth you can swap about. Incredibly useful. Get at as many buckets etc as you can on the finance deal. I had 7 buckets with my first digger. How did I forget? GET A GRAPPLE!! A must for any clearance work. Over half my work is grab work.
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I did two years with just an ldv convoy drop side and a 125cc Honda motorbike due to insurance costs.
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£60 is dirt cheap for an E26. It’s twice the price of an E10 yet only 50% more to hire? That’s why I say make your first purchase a 1.7t. I do operated hire only. £250-£280 for E10 or 1.7t, and £300-£320 for E27. More if doing clearance work, around £400-£450 when felling and burning. Sussex. The main reason I have them is to make my own jobs profitable. Hiring has always been a hassle for me- plus I like having specialist attachments.
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Try fleet and commercial. They are my brokers and seem pretty good.
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1.3tdci Corsa or Astra or combo. 57 genuine mpg. Available for around 2.5k ex meter reading with 70,000 ish. Change the oil every year, no problems touch wood.
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Looks like an E26. I have an E27, finance is around £450/month over 5 years. 1.7t machines are cheaper, and can still do an awful lot especially if you’re scratching about landscaping. I’d start there. Mine is £250/ month over 5 years. The E10 is a great machine and I love mine, but unless you are always needing narrow access it’s too small to be effective when you are on a priced job. As regards finance- go new. I was refused finance on 12k of second hand 2.5t machine, then approved for 31k of new E27 and attachments. ?♂️ I go five years warranty, five years finance. Like long term hire only you get the residual value too.
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I used to get up at 4am every day and deliver papers to cover the rent before working on my business, so I know where you’re coming from. Used to work till 11 at night on commercial strimming work some nights too. Insurance is also always a killer when you’re young. Keep on keeping on, and increased age and profit will make it seem insignificant in the future. I now have five vehicles, all oldish but always the perfect one for whatever job we’re doing. If you end up with three vehicles somehow (maybe truck, van and missus car?) then that’s the minimum for a mini fleet policy, which can save you money sometimes. Subbies who want £200 a day take note- some of us have damn well paid our fucking dues, and we’re not being tight when we say we’re not paying you that!
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If you’re thinking about getting a digger, the most profit (for normal work, especially landscaping, but also small scale clearance jobs) is in a mini digger. I have three from 1.2t to 2.7t and I can move them with a normal 3.5t trailer, no haulage required. Some great finance deals around at the moment. Head on on over to the plant talk forum if you’re interested- planttalk.co.uk
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Glad to hear it mate. You might not believe it but I was once your age and hot headed just the same. I’m 30 now, much more chilled and make much more money. Some pointers based upon what you’ve said in recent threads. You complain about customers not taking you seriously. It’s a real issue. You can’t change your age, but you can adopt mannerisms, clothing style and the like- effectively a slightly different persona when you go to quote a job. Also, it might not be popular with some, but I had no hesitation lying about my age to appear older. You’ll soon work out who is trying it on because of your age- drop them, they won’t improve. A certain type of ‘customer’ is always looking for a mark for a cheap job. The flip side of this is that you will need to deliver the results to back this up. It seems like you want to take a pride in your work, but funds don’t always allow. Charge more. Pretend you’ve been in business longer. Get yourself a Spons landscape price book (£130 for the ebook) and see what the actual going rate is. PM me if you want a couple of rates from the book, but it’s a great investment. Then, deliver over and above what the customer wanted and they will recommend you. You sound like you’re pushed for time- this is great, but is also usually an indication that you could be charging more. Don’t run stupidly overloaded, and as mentioned, never do it as a ‘favour’ for a customer. They extend the job- they pay extra. It’s all in how you frame it to them. You could have said ‘tell you what guys, I’m flat out at the moment, but I’ll rearrange my diary and get the extras done for you because there’s no sense coming back to do it. The depot have problems with the lorry at the moment, but I can get the blocks on my truck and trailer in two loads. It’ll only cost you £200 for me to go and collect them, so cheaper than having them delivered by lorry anyway.” You’d still have been a hero to them. Above all, be safe. It makes my blood run cold to think of some of the stupid shit I’ve done because I was desperate for £50- luckily I’m still here to tell the tale. Invest in your kit and skills-I’ve not had a proper holiday in years, but I’ve got three new diggers and all the tools you could imagine. Work is easy for me now, we never break a sweat. I can make £3-400 profit after paying a labourer most days, with anything from a ride on to a welder.
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That one is always doing the rounds. Total scam.
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Fuck off, you’d put a 21 tonner on it! ??
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A Common Sense approach to Training?
doobin replied to The avantgardener's topic in Training & education
Meh, I've had plenty of 'trained' lads who hit the ground with the second cut. Ones trained for places like the National Trust seem to be the most hapless. -
Can\t see why not if specced properly. That 2.7 tonner posted would usually use DN08 couplings, good for around 50l/m. The smallest MultiX I can find (and the one fitted in the photo by the looks of it) uses DN10, so oversize for that application.
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Every third post you make here is about how 'some geezer offered you a job, but it wasn't enough money'. You go on and on about how you won't work for less than £200 a day and then when you get offered that servicing pumping stations, you work out that the boss man would be making (shock horror) profit upon your work. So you post on here about how he's taking the piss. Why don't you go and get your own service contracts then? Maybe your own insurance, advertising, staff and machines? See how the real businessmen on here do it. If you really were Billy Big Bollocks, drain engineer supreme, who's highly skilled and won't work for less than '2 a day mate, take it or leave it', then you wouldn't even be enquiring about a job posted that's clearly for a general labourer. Instead, you enquire and then puff your chest out on this very thread about how the 'money was poor'.
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Best to go heavy on the grease. It tends to emulsify and collect above and below the gears, but not on them. I usually give them a good half dozen pumps every month, it'll only work its way out past the plastic seals, you can't do any damage. On the long reach machines the grease port that does the angle adjustment doesn't need that much.
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Yes, we just stick the grease gun nozzle in and pump away.
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With your attitude and track record mate, I don’t reckon anyone would employ you anyway.
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You need a hedge trimmer ticket these days??
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If the grab claws will close around it, it’ll often lift or pull straight up/back with the power of the E27. I’ve been pleasantly surprised. Takes a bit of getting used to to not use the crowd ram so much- just a different way of working. They spec a 5ton rotator for an application like this with axial load
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Couple from today. Bunching up and pulling out brambles from behind a fence and then removing selected hazel stools on a nature reserve. Loads of lifting power even with the rotator- I didn't take it off in the end as it wasn't struggling and it's so hand to be able to rotate when windrowing waste for rehandling. Turns out the fuel guage reads high when working uphill- so I ended up walking back to the truck...?♂️