Chippers & Shedders

Author
Discussion

Skyedriver

Original Poster:

20,305 posts

295 months

Tuesday 10th November 2009
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Most chippers and shredders for a couple of hundred pound get rubbish reviews. Anyone suggest a decent one that will cope with rhodedendron prunings up to about 50mm
Thanks
Tony H

Simpo Two

88,603 posts

278 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Having just come from the shed thread, is a shedder a device that shreds sheds?


(Blimey, that's hard to say)

V10Mike

602 posts

219 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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We have had an Al-Ko silent power 3500 for ten years or so, and it has been perfect. Quiet, self-feeding, robust, reliable. Highly recommended, but it will only take branches up to about 1 1/2". I'm not sure any domestic shredders will take two inch branches.

langy

608 posts

252 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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why not hire a decent sized one

Stegel

2,039 posts

187 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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We have a Bosch AXT 2200 HP shredder which will cope with anything up to about 38mm - as has already been said anything domestic is unlikley to cope with 50mm. It has a crushing gear mechanism rather than fast rotating blades, so is relatively quiet and once it has started chewing a branch nothing is going to stop it. Copes well with conifers and laurel, rhododendrons. Only thing it does not like is too many leaves at once - it sometimes disposes of the thicker part of a branch but gets choked by the log jam of leaves towards the outer parts of the branch. Would recommend it unreservedly, and far superior to the cheap screamers that can cope only with single twigs. I have hired a few larger ones, but they are noisy, large and probably quite dangerous!

Duke Thrust

1,680 posts

252 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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I went through a number of electric shredders and was never very happy with them, got this now for the back of my Countax and it's fantastic, very pleased with it indeed. (Interestingly in the instructions that came with it, it says up to 3" on the web it says 2.5" - it's done over 3" with no probs)

http://www.countax.co.uk/Accessories/index.php?id=...

If you've not got something to power it with then it's of no use obvioulsy but I'd say that if you're going to use it a lot get a decent petrol one or hire one for the weekend. The electric ones are okay if you feed a branch at a time but frustrating otherwise. All IMHO of course.

Rollin

6,224 posts

258 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Stegel said:
We have a Bosch AXT 2200 HP shredder which will cope with anything up to about 38mm - as has already been said anything domestic is unlikley to cope with 50mm. It has a crushing gear mechanism rather than fast rotating blades, so is relatively quiet and once it has started chewing a branch nothing is going to stop it. Copes well with conifers and laurel, rhododendrons. Only thing it does not like is too many leaves at once - it sometimes disposes of the thicker part of a branch but gets choked by the log jam of leaves towards the outer parts of the branch. Would recommend it unreservedly, and far superior to the cheap screamers that can cope only with single twigs. I have hired a few larger ones, but they are noisy, large and probably quite dangerous!
My local Homebase has 2 of these on offer at £70 each.

Steve_W

1,544 posts

190 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Had a mountfield that just had a single drum flying round on the horizontal axis and wasn't good with small stuff as it just dropped through.

Then used a Bosch with the twin spirals that intermesh - much better at crushing and chopping things - including the hickory hammer handle I was using as a rammer!

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

261 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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langy said:
why not hire a decent sized one
Quite. We hired a diesel 5" chipper a few weeks ago, governing speed was how fast we could put stuff in it.

Gnits

973 posts

214 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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The Bosch 2200 drum style is so far the best out there that I can find. The chipper style Bosch with a rotary disk blade is not as good - noisy and does not self feed as well and blocks up readily. Tried a Timberwolf a couple of weeks ago and that was a case of run for 2 mins and then take apart to unblock!
The choice will be the Bosch AT25D or a PTO driven jobber the rest that I have ever tried are worse than $H!TE

richyb

4,615 posts

223 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Hire one. For 50mm stuff onwards the domestic ones will just end up clogging and you'll spend more time taking it apart than chipping. £100 will get you a small towed petrol chipper for 24 hours if you shop about.

langy

608 posts

252 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Speedyhire hire them out.

Skyedriver

Original Poster:

20,305 posts

295 months

Wednesday 11th November 2009
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Thanks everyone, reasons for buying are that I will use it regularly and as my moniker suggests I live on Skye where hire shops are few and far between. Plan is to chip/shred regularly to top up areas as mulch to keep weeds down when away from home
Looks like a Bosch or Atko then
Cheers

HiRich

3,337 posts

275 months

Thursday 12th November 2009
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Gnits said:
The Bosch 2200 drum style is so far the best out there that I can find. The chipper style Bosch with a rotary disk blade is not as good - noisy and does not self feed as well and blocks up readily.
Having the latter, I would now broadly agree. It's OK, doesn't clog that often, but it's not brilliant.

For what the OP wants, I would suggest upping the power and doubling the budget.

Skyedriver

Original Poster:

20,305 posts

295 months

Thursday 12th November 2009
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Rollin said:
Stegel said:
We have a Bosch AXT 2200 HP shredder which will cope with anything up to about 38mm - as has already been said anything domestic is unlikley to cope with 50mm. It has a crushing gear mechanism rather than fast rotating blades, so is relatively quiet and once it has started chewing a branch nothing is going to stop it. Copes well with conifers and laurel, rhododendrons. Only thing it does not like is too many leaves at once - it sometimes disposes of the thicker part of a branch but gets choked by the log jam of leaves towards the outer parts of the branch. Would recommend it unreservedly, and far superior to the cheap screamers that can cope only with single twigs. I have hired a few larger ones, but they are noisy, large and probably quite dangerous!
My local Homebase has 2 of these on offer at £70 each.
Homebase in Darlington only have the one with the disc type cutter at £160 and the blade is rusty!
Think its going to be the AlKo at £299

netherfield

2,874 posts

197 months

Thursday 12th November 2009
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