Gasoline powered wood chipper
Well I got the small DR chipper shreader.
The electric one works. Problem is when I cut down one smaller 15 foot tall tree it takes me at least 40 minutes to feed all the little sticks and twigs into the electric wood chipper. A big tree takes like 2 hours. For me everything greater than 1 to 1.5 inches in diameter is fire wood so I'm not trying to mulch everything. The smallest 6.5hp 208cc DR should be fine. |
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that said for small occasional use you'll get plenty of use out of it. |
Yeah I definitely don't want to chip something 4x4. The biggest wood I would chip is rotten wood. It's light as a feather and will catch fire from the slightest spark.
If I grind those into dust they shouldn't be a fire hazard any more. What happened to the Briggs and Stratton engine? It seems like the wood chipper application is hell on motors. If I kill this motor I will try to replace it with the biggest single phase AC motor I can find that will fill in all the important holes. I'm wondering if it's a 56TC frame foot print. I can see blades in the chipper and it looks like hammer mill hammers and a shreader blade down inside the shredder. |
the B&S engine just wore out. I think it was the rings/cylinder. had it happen on the log splitter, too (also a B&S motor). mind you these things had what would amount to light commercial use for the better part of a decade. their higher end stuff has engines with real oil pumps and filters vs the splash lube of the cheap stuff.
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Yeah I have a Kohler v twin riding lawn mower from like 2008 that's had the hell beaten out of it. The Kohler engine uses an oil pump and filter.
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Got a big pile of wood chips now and I'm thinking let them dry out and burn them in the coal furnace.
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It's just a coal furnace that you shovel coal into.
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well dry wood chips are basically coal-precursor lumps so same same right?
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Yeah wood just burns really fast compared to high grade coal.
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I have dried and collected as much wood chips as possible and have been burning them in my coal furnace.
They burn great. I can cold start the coal furnace by stuff about 30 lb of wood chips and light a fire on top of and it takes about 5 hours to burn away. |
I finally sharpened the blade. It was smashing through the green wood more than cutting.
The blade appears to be fairly high alloy. More alloy than tool steel but not quiet high speed steel. A sharp blade is much nicer. |
This is what the chipper blade is made of, from the DR website:
"our knives are made of high-carbon/high-chromium forged alloy tool steel" Yeah most tool steels don't have a lot of chromium. Add a little tungsten and it would be high speed steel |
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