Wicked Bearcat Chipper on a Grand L3940 Kubota

lddykstra

New member

Equipment
L3940HSTC
Feb 5, 2014
23
0
0
Rock Valley, Iowa
All I can say is Check this out!!!
This has become my most used tool.

I can shred branches about the size of my wrist and chip logs up to 5" in diameter this this tool. Also the Kubota handles it with ease which is awesome.

Here is a Video of it in action, you wont want to miss this!.
The end of the video has a slow motion scene.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oN_yd6QgjbY

 

CaveCreekRay

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
L3800 HST, KingKutter box scraper, KingKutter 66" rake, County Pride Subsoiler
Jul 11, 2014
2,631
93
48
Cave Creek, AZ
Chipper/shredders are cool. I call them "bio-mass generators." They explode tree parts so fast, you almost spend more time raking away the chute area than loading in waste. At least with the tractor, you could move ahead 2 feet and start over.

Out here, a lot of the trees have nasty 2" thorns. No match for the shredder. Mine is a 8hp TroyBilt and it will munch a 3" trunk about as fast as you can cram it in the "pencil sharpener." Wish I could adapt the thing to my 3pt...

It used to be a ritual when my daughter was at home. We'd take the Christmas tree down and then take it out on the driveway and saw off the limbs. Then, my daughter would cram the trunk in the chipper and we'd put the chips in a wicker bowl with a lid and the house would smell like Christmas for another week. One day, as the machines 80lb flywheel was winding down, my daughter mentioned the machine was "awesome."

At the time, she was thinking about being a pilot and I told her, "Every airline pilot has to have one of these. If you become one, you can have mine when I retire." Giving me that look kids develop after they sense their dad is trying to pull something over on her, she went inside and told her mom, "Dad said every airline pilot needs a chipper/shredder..."

Her mom (who has a wicked sense of humor) without skipping a beat said, "Yep, they come in handy for grinding up your wife. But of course, you have to freeze her first and then saw her up in little pieces." My daughter stood there drop-jawed.

Then we told her the story about a pilot who decided it was cheaper to grind his wife up than divorce her. He cut her up in little pieces and then froze her. Then, on a early December day, he chipped up her remains and threw the grindings into a lake on his property. Only problem, he was a typical cheap airline pilot and rented his chipper. Doing service a few weeks later, the rental technician found bone chips and other "organic material" in the machine. All the bone fragments in the guy's lake tied him to the murder and he is sitting in prison somewhere.

Sometimes its fun to pull your kids leg...:D