Is it necessary to sharpen the teeth on the feed roller and what is the best method? Works fine with pine but struggles a bit with gripping harder woods
This. Just stay away from above the log as it's fed in with an angle cut off the feed end. I find the techique works best if the angle cut is fed cut face down, not up, as would be expected. Usually I gtry to feed with the angle cut face up but often the WC-68 rollers will still struggle fairly often. Then I flip it over and the roller grabs and forces the log's weight up against the chute top as it pivots the cut tip down and in. THEN there's no slipping! But the other end of the log will get forced up hard by the spring as it catches and pulls it in, so STAY AWY from anywhere above those logs.If youre feeding larger diameter stuff, cut the feed end at an angle so the feed roller can ride up a ramp rather than trying to immediately go over the full diameter.
I see you've had the WC-68 upper cut punch too. I don't think Mike Tyson could hit any harder. I think I've only been hit harder once in my life, and that was by a 12-pound sledgehammer. It found the clothesline that I was building a walkway to for my mom when I was a kid as an FFA project. Knocked me out cold as a wedge when it came back and hit me on the right eyebrow. I guess I should be thankful it was the hammer that found the line and not the double bit axe I'd just cut a root with. I was an accident looking for a place to happen when I was a teenager.This. Just stay away from above the log as it's fed in with an angle cut off the feed end. I find the techique works best if the angle cut is fed cut face down, not up, as would be expected. Usually I gtry to feed with the angle cut face up but often the WC-68 rollers will still struggle fairly often. Then I flip it over and the roller grabs and forces the log's weight up against the chute top as it pivots the cut tip down and in. THEN there's no slipping! But the other end of the log will get forced up hard by the spring as it catches and pulls it in, so STAY AWY from anywhere above those logs.
Ya, that's my first safety warning for any help feeding the WC-68.I see you've had the WC-68 upper cut punch too. I don't think Mike Tyson could hit any harder. I think I've only been hit harder once in my life, and that was by a 12-pound sledgehammer. It found the clothesline that I was building a walkway to for my mom when I was a kid as an FFA project. Knocked me out cold as a wedge when it came back and hit me on the right eyebrow. I guess I should be thankful it was the hammer that found the line and not the double bit axe I'd just cut a root with. I was an accident looking for a place to happen when I was a teenager.
My point about the springs needing tightened wasn't lost, I see. Mine hit me pretty hard in the jaw and knocked me down before I figured out the "stand to the side" and "side arm feed" techniques. Gotta learn to grab limbs far enough back so that you don't get your hand between the limb and the chute, too. It only takes ONCE to teach that lesson. Even with gloves on, when your hand gets smashed between the limb and chute, it HURTS. I'm glad the chute has the rounded edges, too. I can't imagine the damage I'd have done to my arms by now.
However, the infeed drum could still use a little improvement. It really isn't very sharp on the grab knives, and a straight knife isn't going to do as well as a pointed tooth, either, IMO. It's just another one of those things that an arm-chair mechanical designer might second guess what the factory did. I can see where it would be cheaper to make one with straight knives, and I'd have to guess that economical production was the purpose that outweighed pointed teeth. Overall, though, I'm very satisfied with the machine.
The angle cut face up technique is best, but it takes a little more time to get the cut right so that the curl of the limb is down and won't make it fly up and knock your hat off at the very least. Having two people around while chipping seems best too, even if the second just sits up on the seat and watches. There are just too many ways to get hurt working with so many dangerous tools, and the second person may just save your life.
The WoodMAXX WM-8H is the one I was thinking of from my shopping experiences, with dual drums. IIRC, the bottom drum is stationary, and the top drum is sprung like the WC-68. Now that, I can see would make for a much better infeed. However, I didn't want the belt drive for maintenance reasons, though, and preferred the lower speed 4 knife disc over the higher speed lighter two knife disc, and there's only one small drive belt for the hydraulic pump. Price was also a factor, albeit, I'm sure that 4 replacement knives will get my attention one day. I may have been worrying about nothing, but I've made my choice now. The WC-68 is far better than how I was doing the job before.
Agree. I'd try that first.Probably need to increase the tension on the feed roller spring.
The problem is that the roller is already too tight to climb up on the branch, not that it isn't tight enough to pull it in. This seems to be an inherent problem with a single roller infeed.Agree. I'd try that first.
Your post above was quite accurate and comprehensive. I haven’t run 1000 different models of chipper but have run several single roller and several double roller machines. Feeding near full capacity stuff requires some technique on every one I’ve ever run, including all the double rollers. It ain’t brain surgery, but a little practice and skill is very helpful.The problem is that the roller is already too tight to climb up on the branch, not that it isn't tight enough to pull it in. This seems to be an inherent problem with a single roller infeed.
If you do the big chipper to shredder thing, please post results. I’ve considered the same thing but don’t have a shredder so I can’t experiment without incurring cost.When I have big stuff to run, I try to feed it small end first if I can. Or another technique I use is turn the feed rate down low and start a small piece about 2 inches in diameter in, then shove the big one in while the smaller one is still holding the drum up. I chew up brush piles in minutes that used to take me all day with my little 3 inch self-powered MTD. Handling the larger stuff is pretty hard on me, but it's over a lot quicker with a lot less twisting back and forth with a bad back and bad knees. I haven't tried it yet, but I'm thinking maybe I try dumping some of the chips from the big chipper in the little one's shredder hopper to mulch them up finer for the compost pile.