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Pierre_robbo

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Apprentice

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  1. Neil Thanks for your comments very valuable. The auger was at 19 degrees, I've raised it to 16.5 but need to go a bit further yet. Obviously with a flat floored pit what you suggest to mount the gearbox on? I was going to put some shuttering up to lay a concrete slab\box. Probably needs to be 3ft cubed. Would a steel box be better bolted to the pit floor? For the arms, the boiler is on the north side of the pit. The east and west side of the pit have 35cm of clearance between the pit walls and the end of the agitator arms. The west panels has a clearance of 5cm and the north about 1m. As the boiler is a snugg fit I can't move the agitator gearbox only change the agitater arms. Is it correct that they are none adjustable? As for the auger section running through the pit wall, this being changed for some reason, can't remember why, why is this auger housing section special? Concrete panels are sealed and the whole pit had a double layer of visqueen laid in the hole before we dropped the panels it to keep the water out. As for panelling the pit out. I'd like it panelling out but time and cash could be in short supply this year so I might leave it til next summer. I think I'd like to leave a good gap between the arms and the paneling as some suggest the arms need to be able to push oversized pieces down rather than. Catching on the arms on every rotation. Thanks for your useful advice Neil, where are u based? Other than this the install is going well, filling the pit twice per year is going to be a luxury compared with carrying wood into the house everyday (using about 12 cub, per year) So I guess we are still looking for the dream chipper Chip arb waste to g30 PTO driven 160 For less than £15k Minimal oversized piece to block up biomass boilers.
  2. . Although it doesn't seem like it the pit will be at ground level, see top left of the image. 61cu/m capacity hopefully means it should need filling twice per year.
  3. Openspace - I was thinking about putting some bollards in the pit to almost reduce the down force in the agitator. Encourge a little bridging if you like. This should hopefully reduce the load on the gearbox and auger. I've 2 house, one I let out and adjoined a tiny village hall. This 50kw will be heating the lot. Just installed concrete panels today. Looks great I'll add pics tomorrow. With respect to chip type, I have endless ash and birch tree around so u was (the last I cut down was 140 years old). I intend to chip every last lb of the tree but how to economically chop the brash is my biggest concern. Pto chipper...? Crap Chinese 8'' on eBay start at £1500 or I could spend 20k
  4. this is the first install. Test fix. Concrete panels going in tomorrow!
  5. Thanks guys. Some important points for me to bare in mind. I'll start with some decent stuff and then maybe blend in a little finer chip later on.
  6. i'm just having an eta woodchip burner fitted and intend to run it on homegrown wood chipped at 25% moisture at G30/50 sizing. while hiring in a huge chipper to make this makes perfect sense i've also heaps of brash <50mm and less that i was considering putting through a small hired in chipper. Obviously this will create a much finer chip, has anyone put such material through a woodchip burner? has anyone had any issues with such material?
  7. I'm after one too to feed a couple of boilers. Would someone like to scare me with the price please?
  8. What you really need to loose weight is hard work. 18lbs in 4 weeks. Anyone beat that?
  9. Excuse my ignorance but are you just climbing for fun or are you Cutting these tree too?

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