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LoadhandlerUK

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Posts posted by LoadhandlerUK

  1. The gearboxes are actually very robust, but the clutch consists of a steel 'dog clutch'

     

    Any dog clutch will wear on the corners if not fully, and quickly engaged. So to get the best life out of the clutch, Honda state in their owners manual " engage the clutch firmly and quickly"

    The older manuals even stated to push the mower forward before engaging the clutch, thereby allowing the clutch to engage without 'ratcheting' (and thus wearing)

     

    This 'push before engaging' method will greatly extend the life of the transmission on any mower.

     

    You're right - I should have been more specific - it's always the clutches. Thanks - we'll try the 'firm and quick method' :blushing: or for the 'push and engage method' I'll get a midwife to give me a demo :nurse:

  2. Turned up in post today fitted straight away and delivered two loads of logs fab bit of kit for the money.Ive got the arb top fitted to my ranger so can't shut the back right up so might do a mod a bit of chain and hook at sometime so for now ill just sit it in the back of truck then just clip it to truck that just takes a minute or two then whind out the load.

     

    Really pleased that you're happy :001_smile: Sales are going well now - and picking up towards the Spring. We're always amazed that people didn't know they needed one until they got one.

     

    I think they're still a bit of a secret :listen:

  3. You buy petrol/diesel/paraffin by litre

    You buy electricity by kw/hour

     

    You buy logs by ?

     

    Needs nationally agreed standard ......

    i'd say you need agreed mousture content and volume

     

    I think trick is to worth WITH a trading standards office and get this bottomed 100%

    THEN roll it out across the country

    So you can buy logs with confidence and if there is a problem there is standard to work to .....and where your logs can be checked

     

    Eliminates back street log sellers .........

     

    You buy petrol/diesel/paraffin by litre - very easy to retail accurately

    You buy electricity by kw/hour very easy to retail accurately

     

    You buy logs by ? not easy to retail or measure consistently

     

    Needs nationally agreed standard .......bureaucracy not required

    i'd say you need agreed mousture content and volume prices would rise to match

     

    This leaves the tried and tested 'trust the retailer' - and most people do. Supply crap or poor value for money and you'll be lucky to see that customer (or their friends and neighbours) again. Supply good product and good value and you'll preserve your customer base.

     

    There's something about clean, well cut and split logs that briquettes just can't match. Ok it's a good use of waste product but I think both can exist side by side. I don't see Adolf Briquette taking over the world just yet :001_smile:

  4. Sainsbury's 're-formulated' firelighters :confused1:

     

    'Kerosene removed, more sustainable palm-oil added' :confused1:

     

    'may take a little longer to light; but just as effective' :001_huh:

     

    After ten minutes, a couple of boxes of matches and third-degree finger burns, you won't need the fire as you'll be out for the evening. Waiting in the three hour queue in A&E :thumbdown:

  5. Hondas are brilliant mowers, that does sound cheap at £200. They do suffer w ith gearbox problems though, if you try it and it makes a lot of clicking noises on engaging drive be cautious.

    I have replaced mine with a Hayter,which is chain driven, less to go wrong i hope !

     

    Are you me? :confused1:

     

    Have two Hondas - brilliant overall reliability and ease of use - but..those gearboxes :thumbdown:

     

    Now use a Hayterette for anything rough or tough then finish with a Honda.

     

    So far so good :001_smile:

  6. It's an interesting one this. Everyone on the slopes and particularly the youngsters are donning helmets - even before the MS incident.

     

    But, like everything in our now litigious world, ask a helmet manufacturer whether it's 'safe' to bolt on a GoPro style camera and whether they would be perfectly happy etc, etc and I reckon they'll run a mile.

     

    And now it's broken out in the press, the next thing will be the winter sports insurance companies adding a caveat that 'your policy may be invalidated if'.......:001_huh:

  7. We have people, even with large 12-14Kw fires, who think that 2 x 6" logs delivered is better value than 1 x 12".

     

    We want to deliver as big as their stoves can take with a few smaller well split for good measure.

     

    Less handling for them and us. It also depends how they run their stoves?

  8. Speak to Richard Olley at Kingswood - he's a friend of mine. Advice and smiles (not beer) for free.

     

    Give him a call and chew it over. He's not going to 'sell' you training. Talk to him first about concerns, prospects etc.

     

    Getting your tickets will not be a panacea to employment / unemployment. I'm not a tree surgeon but know plenty outside of the forum. It is tough, all weather etc etc and running your own business it that's what it leads to eventually 'ain't going to be easy either. But neither was your former career. :001_smile:

  9. How different is the Hycrack splitter from the Eagle? What's the Eagle like in general to use and run? Thinking of getting one so any feedback welcome.

     

    The eagle is simple to run and use mine runs off the tractor. I have had no problems yet. Does a great job for what I need it for. I do some cords and quite a lot of stuff I get from tree surgeons. The cone splitter on the eagle only takes rings up to a certain size though..there must be some other eagle users on here. I think there are some threads on it somewhere. The hycrack is a brilliant machine bought it a couple of weeks ago. Wished I had bought one sooner. I can also split bigger rings.. I think the dimensions are on their web page. If you need to know anything else just ask

     

    I must declare a Hycrack interest - but having said that we've heard the Eagle suffers from belt slip?

  10. ........so, i can't help but think the guy whom is leaving,may have a valid point.....there can be a awful lot of inconsequential "chatter",with sometimes almost superfluous remarks on piesces of equipment........

     

    .....However,that said ,there can also be a wealth of hard-won information from lots of people,especially regarding those small pices of equipment that it would be hard to find out about......

     

    ....what makes me seethe is the constant derailing of a thread,or where the writer has copletely lost the thread of the intial piont but maybe left to have a coffee(or tea) with spelling lsso and the idea half formed in the head,maybe easier been told..........

     

    .......however,thumbs up whoever likes chipper chain?..........:001_smile:

     

    Did anyone see that programme on BBC2 after Songs of Praise last night on industrial plastics?

  11. Spits too much really for open fires even when seasoned - but good for woodburners. Burns well at high temperatures.

     

    Used in traditional charcoal and also the iron industries of Kent and Sussex grew up in part because of chestnut. That was the beginning of many chestnut coppicing operations. Straight lengths are still valued round here for fencing products and firewood. :001_smile:

  12. You get out what you put in - and as others have said whilst you may not always agree, the opinions of others in the same or parallel industries are always worthwhile. It's like having 10,000 mates down the pub only it's never your round :thumbup1:

     

    Everyone learns everyday in this walk of life and this is a valuable resource.

     

    The whinge was unnecessary though :confused1:

  13. There are well over 6000 Hycracks out there in the UK - and I would reckon from the feedback we have that the majority are in constant use. They've been around for over 30 years and we have people every day of the week asking how to convert the old, obsolete styles: Spenco, Sparex, Wilson, Bark Buster etc to accept Hycrack cones and tips.

     

    As I said in an earlier post, they are the Marmite of splitters and posts like this run on every forum that has an interest in machinery. They are efficient and well built and as I've said before the plethora of copy cones, open shafts and bearings and all sorts of drive mechanisms are the real concern if a d.i.y. machine is sold on (as some have been) - we saw one recently that had an imported cone welded (out of true) to a shaft with plummer blocks bolted to a plate and the customer brought it to us 'to try and see why the bearings were worn out'. As a pure side issue, the Hycrack is one of the only machines I know that in a well worn state, some twenty years after it was purchased, is worth almost twice what the original owner gave for it.

     

    I see both sides of the story but it's each to his own; you either love 'em or hate 'em :001_smile:

  14. yes very true hit the nail on the head

     

    been bitten a few times and bought a dud low hp engine wrong gearing belts jumping off stalling engine blood and more finger blood lol

     

    i just plod with a hydraulic splitter as i only do arb waste so had no choice just a steep learning curve for me duh"

     

    Not to cast too many aspersions here - and I know that alot of the kit that's made at home or in the workshop is made well - but I've seen some shocking screw type splitters cobbled together.....:thumbdown:

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