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Dan Maynard

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Everything posted by Dan Maynard

  1. Good job. This video again makes me think about buying a battery saw.
  2. Green waste that gets weighed in and paid for gets a ticket from the weighbridge, I have a pile of those somewhere. Chip tipped at an allotment, no. I don't know the technical definitions but does strike me it wouldn't be legal to go and tip waste at the allotment anyway, what we are doing is delivering chip to the allotment which they use for gardening. Other industries must have by-products though, must be a legal precedent. What about yeast going from the brewery to the Marmite factory?
  3. Yeah maybe waiting for the bubble to burst is the thing to do, kind of feel it's not the right time to buy now.
  4. I thought Wikipedia was the key word. Make-it-up-i-pedia.
  5. Subsistence is an interesting one for me so I looked into it a bit and I reckon may be missing out a bit myself. The way I read it if you buy the food on the way to the yard that's not deductible because your business travel hasn't started yet. Once you have begun your business travel then costs of travel and subsistence are all claimable. EIM31816 - Employment Income Manual - HMRC internal manual - GOV.UK WWW.GOV.UK A guide to the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003. There's some other stuff about salesmen covering areas but I would reckon once you have a truck and chipper it's business travel.
  6. More power. I'd get on the FR Jones website quick and buy a 550XP on sale for £40 less than the 545. If you're doing a lot of over 20" though you might be better off with a 562 and 18" bar.
  7. Does seem fishy, looks more like welded steel on the back view and doesn't look that thick so I would be cautious about cast iron in the description and wouldn't want to burn anything in there without a good layer of fire bricks (which seem to be missing).
  8. One other package which hasn't been mentioned is FreeAgent. I found that as a NatWest customer I can use it free, (because RBS bought the business) that saves me £19+vat per month. It is a company based in the UK, cloud based as the others but more focused on small business. I was using QuickBooks self employed which is cheapish and very good if you're a contractor but too limited for stock, capital etc. Moving over involved a bit more of the accountant speak than I was used to but it's been ok. One other benefit of being cloud based is I can create invoices on my phone which are just the same as ones created on the computer, of course you can see everything from anywhere you log in.
  9. Not sure about slow, you'd be going some on a tirfor handle to keep up with that.
  10. I think the potential to side load the zigs and zags would make it a no no for me. Surely the design intent would be a biner in the top hole onto the tether?
  11. They're on wheels, even less permanent than sheds.
  12. Maybe I'm lucky, if you go to FRJones and set the size to 49 you get to choose ..... Meindl. That's it. So Airstreams for me every time. Easy.
  13. And check the oil, low level cuts out which might happen you dip it to the stump?
  14. I think you should check into building regs approval as well, as I recall if you go over 30m2 then you need to go through building control, hence why my garage is 29.5m2. It's not supposed to be too difficult but I found it just one more thing that I didn't want to tackle. Maybe you could initially build smaller sheds with doors which are near each other?
  15. Having said that the advice is pretty likely to be to get someone reputable to have a look at it, so may be helpful to say where you are. Increasing cracks aren't generally a thing to ignore.
  16. Agree with this. Fast forward another year and you look at the empty crates in your yard and wonder what you're going to do for firewood next season. and then ... Fast forward 20 years and you have a van with kitchen and toilet as you're fed up of peeing in compost heaps and behind sheds.
  17. That picture really makes me want to dig the gravel away and find out what's going on - seems bizarre that the tree would get so big a buttress after the house was built so was it cut back to dig foundation for an extension?
  18. This has been bugging me all day, but I think I have the answer. I'll blunt all the teeth on my silky so that as well as chainsaw trousers and Airstreams I can wear my sawpod.
  19. I'm not particularly against HP either, just that the HP machines I have bought tend to have a lot of HP enhancement software and I don't like that. Each to their own and all that. Windows 8.1 though, you've definitely lost me. Better to have made the move to 10 which we are recently doing from 7.
  20. You see, I would say don't spend less than £500. A laptop for £300 is the cheapest of everything in every department, it won't last. MacBooks do last, but so do more expensive Windows based systems. I have spent £1200 on a Lenovo laptop in 2010, it's still great. I spent about the same on my desktop PC plus a £350 graphics card, it has lasted years just like Steve's Mac system that cost £3k. I'm not particularly against Apple, I think it's good but expensive. Same as what car you choose, do you buy VW or Audi? One lad I work with has an iPhone, he pays out £85 a month for the latest plus a full whizz data package. Good, but expensive.
  21. Stoves also win when not in use, all the rest of the time you have a howling draft up or down an open chimney. I would say it's worth it to get new glass.
  22. £15k? Spend £10k on new chains, never bother sharpening again, and blow the rest down the pub.
  23. We've just bought 4 Lenovo E590 laptops at work to get Windows 10 (and the old ones were pretty old), I like Lenovo because they come with less rubbish on than the HPs I've used. We got the i5, so £619 which is £140 off if you buy direct from Lenovo ThinkPad E590 |15.6" SMB Laptop (RapidCharge) | Lenovo UK WWW.LENOVO.COM Buy Lenovo ThinkPad E590, a Skype-certified SMB laptop with upto 13 hours of battery (RapidCharge support), delivers excellent web conferencing with HD webcam. My opinion is spend about that much to get something that will last a few years.
  24. I reckon if you're keeping firewood then chip it onto the ground by each tree, the throw of the chipper will spread it out enough.
  25. I think I read in Timberwolf marketing somewhere that chip is about 6 times smaller than the brash. Personally I think the answer is definitely somewhere between 2 and 20 but it all depends....

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