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cornish wood burner

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Everything posted by cornish wood burner

  1. Have you checked the bearings yet?
  2. This would work but all I used to do was use a piece of wood and spin the blade slowly by hand BACKWARDS. It doesn't snag or damage the blade and as mentioned you need to plck out the rogue ones. Check the things I mentioned previously as well as the height though.
  3. Might be a quality item but very low output. Probably fine for biscuit tins but if you want one to weld reasonably thick steel you will need 180 amp minimum. It will take you ages otherwise. Personally I would speak to your local welding supplier to see what he recommends. There are plenty out there with better performance and cheaper.
  4. Weigh a bag, Weigh a plank. Divide by bag weight then there's your answer. You don't even have to buy the plank. Seems a waste though.
  5. Another option for you . Once split its value will jump dramatically so if you get a cheap splitter it will pay for dong. Fit in well with the rest of your buisness? I am not suggesting you go electric but the limiting factor with my electric one is me lifting the rings on it, so you don't have to pay a fortune.
  6. I presume you mean £50/tonne. For comparison our chipping cost is less as the transport is over 600 tonne and our wood is easy to handle. £16/tonne sounds right to me. How are the rings going to be loaded. Even if the chipper copes the grab on the chipper will not feed it at 60 tonnes /hour so the price goes up,.We have to be desperate to pay moe than£50/tonne. Walking floor is the cheapest transport. Get a price first. Sorry to be negative but these are things to consider. The last heizohack I looked at had smaller blades than the Komptech so smaller bites. Perhaps why it coped so well.
  7. I still think the firewood route is the way to go. You just need someone with a splitter who is looking for hardwood. Transport to another yard via bulk tipper probably similar cost as chipping. Remember you still have to have transport after chipping so two hits.
  8. Explain to Dan what you want to chip. I would think they might spend as much time clearing jams as producing chip. It will be very costly per ton then.
  9. All ringed up?
  10. Shredded chip is not good for biomass if that is your plan. bridges, jams augers etc.We have had a load chipped with the beast, never again. Very few biomass setups could cope.
  11. I would say a bit less for hardwood. Why chip it, surely would be more money in it to sell for firewood
  12. The diameter is no problem but why rings. Worse possible for chipping. How long are they. Southern wood energy could do it but if short rings then it is a recipe for constant jamming. As you probably know chippers cut well across the grain but not with it.
  13. Mainly Dan Upton Southern Wood energy. We have had many different chippers over the years but for quality, quantity and service Dan is very good. For smaller top ups we use John Wotton but he only has 300 ish hp compared to Dans 780. John produces very good chip with his new Musmax though.
  14. I try for 2 years if I can. We have just chipped and it is around 25%. I have seen slab wood at 18% but this batch was all round in large stacks. Contract chipping is the only way for us. Two days and our store is full again(600 tons)
  15. I work for a commercial nursery and we have several large glasshouses which we heat by mainly underfloor heating.
  16. Its fine so I believe, but the wood we buy is for our biomass boiler. We dry it then chip it.
  17. Spin it slowly by hand then check them. File the high ones to even up. Check rake angle and set as well. Presumably you have checked the bearings.
  18. We buy a few thousand tons of softwood a year and Mark always looks after us regarding price and supplies when we want it. If our agreed price was public then someone who wanted a few loads might feel aggrieved if they were quoted a higher price.
  19. You could jump both ways by having a smooth plate which is easy sliding for the big rings and have a piece of chequer plate secured with a couple of bolts with wing nuts for the more manageable sizes.
  20. I would say price is dependent on quantity. We also buy from Mark but I believe he would not want individually agreed prices made public.
  21. Dowty is perfect when you have a shoulder as on hydraulic fittings but not all parallell threads have suitable shoulders especially on diesel fittings. Often liquid sealers weep slightly under pressure. If you use PTFE tape make sure you wind the correct way so that when assembling you tighten the tape. Do not go over the end of the fitting. Do NOT leave old tape on the fitting. Clean first then use new tape.
  22. Edge looks more like shredder blades to me. The chipper we hire in gets new blades or a sharpen every day
  23. PTFE tape
  24. We used to drill at least 10000 holes a year for many years on one job with a hand drill and found either Dormer or Presto the best. Pressed I would say Presto is the better. If you are drilling special steel then Cobalt but for general use as you have described Presto or Dormer.
  25. Have you checked if the mounting holes are exactly the same relative to the flywheel edge of the core on the original and replacement modules? Are the replacements new or secondhand? What is the resistance between the kill wire and the coil core?

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