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Dan Maynard

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Everything posted by Dan Maynard

  1. It's all right, doesn't need one as it's got no chain.
  2. Ah you may be right. I was thinking there's more air in between brash than chip, it gets smaller when you cut it up.
  3. Hired in chipper, bet you.
  4. Got to be a Facebook add 'free firewood, just needs cutting down'. Should have it sorted in no time.
  5. There's a factor here of shape, otherwise woodchip would be very light.
  6. I think nearly any tree grown in a dense patch like that will go tall and thin, it's about the light. I'm thinking of field maple, you see it roadside go pretty bushy round here when it gets light all around. Would be good firewood, and coppices well - but in woods it will go tall and straight. I'd go hazel, then when it's all cut to the ground you get a useful crop even if it's pea sticks and basket weaving, and in 5 years there will be some log size pieces.
  7. Do you ever look on Yell for anything at all, ever? £90 x 12 months seems a lot to me, like Steve said better things it could be used for.
  8. 2101 and 2111 both seem to be the same thing, felling over 380. It is made more confusing because you can cover more than one unit on one course.
  9. I suggest an experiment. One evening get four tins, a film on TV, and set up two 3kW fan heaters on full. Probably when the kids are in bed, like.
  10. Yeah maybe bluish orange is a better description. When the wood first goes on you get a lot of yellow flame and then as this burns off it goes more orange. It also depends on the wood, so the lighter wood eg pine tend to burn more yellow, elm oak will be less. The main thing is to have the fire burning hot, that helps with complete as possible combustion and keeps flue temp up so that you don't get tars condensing up there. I clean my glass very rarely because the air flow down it keeps it clean.
  11. Ah funnily enough I did that to my thumb in the last rugby game I played in at University. Right thumb swelled up like a kiwi and went purple, then once swelling down 4 weeks in a cast. Gave up the rugby and concentrated on rowing.
  12. In my limited experience enquiries ebb and flow a bit with the seasons, eg people aren't thinking about trees in the run up to Christmas. Also the nature of work eg hedges autumn, removals any time, fruit pruning winter, nesting puts off some jobs which you can then come back to. There's always something going on though.
  13. I don't know if you prefer metric or imperial, but if you had a 6 foot long trailer the tailboard could be about 24" high under the chute. Overall the machine is about 7 foot long. Whatever you use needs good ramps which can't slip, it weighs about 300kg. Relatively narrow to fit through any standard garden gate, so width will not be an issue on a trailer.
  14. I don't know what palmar perforation or thumb avulsion are but they don't sound good. Food for thought.
  15. I run mine with a low roar, that keeps the air washing down the glass and also makes sure the burn is nice and hot. Ideally the flames should burn blueish once the initial yellow flare up has gone after a log is added. If you close it too much then the draft goes and the flames get lazy and yellow, these will be making smoke which you don't want as more likely to deposit soot in the chimney.
  16. I know Dane Wood at Brampton Valley Group has done a job with Alistair Magee earlier this year, he must be just down the M1 from you as he's Towcester. https://www.facebook.com/104399381120613/posts/193831728844044/
  17. I noticed the phrase a new version recorded by MacColl, she's unfortunately been dead 20 years.
  18. If it's starved of air the pressure in the whole room is low. Pushing air round the room with a fan will make almost no difference, you need the window open to let air in to equalise the pressure. Obviously it's going to be cold but you should be able to gradually close it down so that air is only coming in to match the flow that is going up the flue. If this is the problem then ideally you would put a vent somewhere near the fire so that cold air comes in and straight to the fire without making the room cold.
  19. Had a euc which looked lovely firewood, ended up picking out the straight branches and chucking half of it away as I didn't think the effort was worth it. I don't have a very high tonnage splitter though.
  20. If it's brand new, surely Timberwolf can help? I would have thought either try the chipper on another vehicle where you know the electrics are ok, or try another trailer on your transit. Going to seem daft to buy a trailer board and stick it on the back but might be cheapest/easiest way to get going, probably buy one in Screwfix this afternoon.
  21. At least with the old faxes you knew it had gone through. Unless their machine had run out of paper of course....
  22. I don't disagree, if you're doing any amount of milling an 881 is the best choice and not that much more money than a 661 really. But he's doing one log, and doesn't want to spend over a grand on a saw right now. £589inc Vat on a 7900 comes with 18" bar on it will get used loads on tree surgery as well, save ringing up stems with the 261. 80cc, will manage a bit of milling just slower.
  23. What tipper trailer did you go for if you don't mind me asking? Still looking at options for getting one myself, not keen on the idea of one-piece side panels 12 foot long on the Nugent.
  24. The idea of there being less tax collected seems unlikely. Almost certainly an episode of Yes Minister about that. Maybe the tax on petrol and diesel will double to compensate? Or vehicle road tax? Already quite high. London pollution zones are raising extra tax as well I guess, roll that out to every city?
  25. Do you really need a 661? I think next step after a 261 would be 70cc, you could get a Makita 7900 to save money or go for 462 or 572. These saws will run a 36" lopro, this is exactly the choice I had although I already had a 365 and 461.

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