Muddy42
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Everything posted by Muddy42
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We're splitting hairs here - what ever saw the OP uses this job will be slow and hard work. Petrol saws are probably still cheaper, which seems to be a big consideration.
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Sorry if I sounded condescending, you clearly know what you are doing! Yes get a small petrol chainsaw. Any of the Stihl MS1s will be fine. I have a professional stihl MS261 which is great but five times the price new or three times if second hand. The case for cheap saws is quite strong. Have fun with the firewood. It doesnt sound the most efficient in terms of handling wood, but satisfying never-the-less. I process wood on an industrial scale for 4 days of the year with hired heavy machinery but I still handle the odd blown tree to tidy up. maybe have a bag or two of firewood delivered to tide you through while the wood dries?
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You can buy a stihl MS162 for £140 or so. It should be fine for wood that small. Please buy protective clothing too. Carrying out even small firewood will be brutal, and probably the reason why it was only "part cleared". Can you find a quad and trailer or rent a large power barrow? Finally you mention chopping and putting on the fire in the same sentence. Please please ensure wood dries to <20% moisture on the inside. In the UK this normally means it needs to be split, stacked in the sun and wind for minimum of a dry summer but realistically a year is required. If you're cutting it now, the sap is in full force and you are probably too late to burn this winter.
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Agreed. I can think of few places where one person could control the deer properly on 25,000 acres. Sure you’ve put the right number of zeros?
- 23 replies
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- woodland management
- tree protection
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Will do, I can easily run off some into a jar at the AGA end. The tank is under cover, so yes pretty unlikely.
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Ah gotcha, modern air vents. This is the kind of draughty victorian house where you feel the wind indoors, so I don't think that'll be a problem. Thanks for your help, I'll check the flue, clean everything get it level and try again.
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Where do I look for air vents? If I run it with the door off (supervised like the photo above) the flame still misbehaves and presumably it would get masses of air with the door off.
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OK. I did clean the flue at xmas, but will check again as I do have jackdaws. I didn't realise that could send the flame off.
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Please accept my apologies then, I thought you might be referring to the smudges of dirt or food ! I'm pretty sure its just a gravity fed smudge pot then (is that what I refer to as the regulator tank sitting next to the AGA?). Its a 1990s model, always was oil, not a converted. There is plenty of oil in the tank and plenty of oil getting to the burner.
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I suspect you are extracting urine, but the various wires are either the sensor for the temperature gauge above (the dial has clouded up so no use now) the flow control (works fine) or the safety shut off thingy.
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Can anyone help me get my oil AGA burning better? Picture below. I have serviced it myself for the past three years - cleaning out all the black carbon from the burner/pipes, replace wickes with cut outs etc. I only normally only turn it on during the winter months (and even then very low) but recently the electric cooker broke and I needed to turn it up to cook properly. However its not getting that hot. Oil seems to be flowing fine, but the flame flickers and is an uneven shape. I suspect its something to do with level-ness. I check with a spirit level, but the level is a bit big, maybe I need a smaller two directional level? Also sometimes the fuel line seems to push the burner out of level. Any suggestions gratefully received.
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Thanks. I will and Im keen to see if others have this experience with Rotatech bar oil Also I think older threads like this dont get the same profile - not on todays posts nor my notifications. Weird?
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Very true, luckily often thick line wont fit in the tap-n-go heads . I spent years p1ssing around trying to get underpowered strimmers to cut knee high grass - thicker string and blades. its slow, frustrating for the operator and not good for the machine whatever thickness line you use. I think electric strimmers or <30 cc (that nearly everyone seems to have) are fine for neatening up the whiskers on the edge of a lawn but for 'long grass' that only gets cut once, twice or thrice a year - you need 45cc or above and thick string. Same for brambles and weeds.
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me too. I start off on the top two slots but if the line jams, I use the bottom pair as backup. I have some non desert extrusions 3.9mm string too. But it doesn't come close in terms of durability, you have to try this stuff.
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I think I followed your recommendation. Epic combination that obliterates grass and brambles. Occasionally one of the two strings gets jammed or the stub gets too short to extract, but the beauty of the four string head is you can carry on by using the spare slots. Its easy to strip, grease and replace pawls and springs, if like me you lent it someone with a ham fist.
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Old raspberry cane wire, a dog's gravestone, markers for the water main, brass bedstead, lots of treestumps, buckets - I've hit the lot!
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I find over time blades cause a lot more mechanical wear and damage than string. Eventually you will hit something or something goes off centre, extra vibrations, more damage to machine, even with a big strimmer. The tri blades are a bit worse for this than the circular blades, Seriously consider an oregon jet fit head and some 4mm square Diamond Edge line. With my husky 555rxt, this cuts as well as a blade and lasts for ages. If you think about it the give provided by a string does a similar thing to a clutch. String is cheaper to replace than mechanical parts!
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hi there. I'm reviving a 15 year old thread to show I can use the search function but also because this is happening to me on a few stihl chainsaws. The common factor is I'm using Rotatech Premium Bar oil and Stihl chains in all the saws. - Stihl 088 with 25 and 36 inch Rollomatic ES bars .404 .063 - Stihl MS460 with 20 inch rollomatic bar 3/8 - Also to a certain extent in the MS261, but it has a short 16 inch bar The 460 has had oiling problems in the past (solved by suggestions here) but I'm pretty sure these are fixed. I replaced the pump, worm drive and cleaned out the lines and bar oil tank. Oil pump screws turned to max. The saw gets through nearly as much as oil as fuel. It doesn't appear to have any leaks, but oiling is just poor. I can't get oil to flick off the end of the bar. Unless the bar groove and oiling hole is kept scrupulously clean, the nose sprocket seems to jam up with dust and heat. I can get it going again with WD40 and brute force in the workshop, but I worry about doing some damage. I don't do plunge cuts and this is not in extreme temperatures. Has anyone had this happen with rotatech oil? Should I thin the oil or try a thinner bar oil? Any suggestions gratefully received.
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If the plants are going free and they are nice and old, maybe take one and make a bonsai tree? they are excellent for that.
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Seriously don't plant or transplant box hedges - caterpillars or blight are all over the UK. It doesn't matter if you don't have neighbours. You will end up with blight, its inevitable. Then you can go down the stressful route of hand- cutting, spraying, fertilizing and you still end up with blight. Its not worth the effort. Viable alternatives are: Ilex Crenata, Japanese box leaved holly. Taxus Baccata, Yew. Euonymus Japonicus, evergreen spindle. Teucrium x Lucidrys
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its bank of england data. Like it or not, the PRS sector has shrunk. Has the private rental sector been shrinking? WWW.BANKOFENGLAND.CO.UK The purpose of Bank Overground is to share our internal analysis. Each...
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various stats UK’s rental market shrinks by 400,000 homes in just seven years WWW.PROPERTY118.COM The UK's private rented sector (PRS) has seen a significant decline in the number of homes to rent since 2016, one leading real estate advising firm reveals. According to CBRE, it...
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Yes, thats another variation on ‘sell’ and it does happen that low value rural properties get left vacant or demolished. A farmer near me just demolished an old wreck with his digger to avoid paying the council tax. Not all have mortgages or the mortgage is on the whole farm. Sorry its hard to generalise with housing.
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Sold to another mug landlord, sold to second home owners, airbnb, demolished, left vacant even. In remote rural areas sometimes the cost to fix up and meet various energy and compliance regs makes no sense compared to low rents or pay the mortgage. Construction and labour costs have rocketed in recent years.
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Be careful what you wish for. Landlords aren't stupid, if you make the law too tenant friendly, introduce rent controls or keep yoyoing between policies, the supply of rental housing just dries up and landlords either sell or holiday lets. These sound like great vote winning policies but achieve completely the opposite outcome of what was intended. Something like this happened in the 60s,70s,80s and history is probably repeating itself now. A functioning private rental market requires a clear and fair lease and some certainty that things won't be meddled with by each successive government.