Small Chipper in a Trailer. Am I Crazy?

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waross

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So I am new to the business side of tree service. And so far I have not gone into debt. I am basically a one man operation with a couple of part time employees to serve as ground crew.
I was given the chipper in question so don't go on about how it is a bad or low end piece of equipment. It was free. I was also given a 35 ton splitter. Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
I am doing mostly pruning jobs with occasional tree removal. I bought a trailer to haul away the cuttings and wood. I am considering mounting the chipper into the trailer towards the front and just have it shoot the chips into the bed of trailer. Still working on how I would mount it. This way my groundies or myself can chip up the limbs and such on sight taking up less room in the trailer, leaving room for any wood over 5" in diameter.
The other option was to bring all the clipping back home and chipping them all here in the back of the lot. But then I might be filling the whole trailer up pretty quick with clippings and such.
I included some pics.
I appreciate any positive advise your willing to provide, Just save the flaming of the piece of equipment. LOL
Chipper Trailer01.jpg Chipper Trailer02.jpg Chipper Trailer03.jpg
 
Not flaming, but try the chipper out to figure out it's true capacity. I doubt that it would chip up to 5" diameter logs. Personally, I burn stuff over 1.5" diameter, so it would not be a problem for me.

You will need some kind of shroud on your trailer to collect the blown chips, and to contain them during transport. Stack the other limbs on top.

Since the chipper is small, I would not mount it on the trailer, but use the ramp to just take it when needed. That gives you more versatility in using the trailer.

JMHO

Philbert
 
I have incurred grevious debt whilst building my global arboricultural empire, so I want to commend you for your fiscal monetary policy.
Philbert's idea of NOT mounting the chipper in the trailer is entirely correct, imo.
Bandit used to make a chipper / dump trailer combo. Mebbe they still do. But.......
ask yourself how often do you ever see one of them? How come other chipper manufacturers don't offer similar units?
I used to chip into my dump trailer, but there is no way I'd mount the chipper to it so that I'd always be stuck having to haul both around to jobs that only required the one, or the other.
 
Philbert, I totally agree. Even though it says it can handle 5 1/2" stock I am in agreement that I can burn some of the smaller stuff and not overload this thing. But I wasn't going to tell my brother-in-law down when he offered to give it to me for free. LOL. Even though it is small, it still weighs in at around 500 lbs. So I really don't want to be wheeling it up and down that ramp everyday.

And Pelorus, I was trying to come up with a not so permanent mount so I can do as you suggest. Take it out at home when not needed on a job or if I need the trailer for other things.
I was leaning towards some sort of bracket idea that could be bolted to the floor. If I could find some sort of huge blind nut or something as such so I don't have to climb under the trailer to attach it.
 
Even though it is small, it still weighs in at around 500 lbs. So I really don't want to be wheeling it up and down that ramp everyday.

Mount an electric ATV winch, or boat trailer hand crank winch, on the trailer. You can use it to pull the chipper up the ramp, as well as: larger logs, your log splitter, large lawn mowers, ATVs, etc., etc, etc.

If the chipper is mounted on the trailer, you will have to lift things up higher, and maybe reach farther, to reach the in-feed chutes, than if it is on the ground. Might make even more noise mounted on the trailer bed!

Whatever you decide, let us know and send photos!

Philbert
 
I wonder if you bolted some steel angle iron vertically to the inside of the trailer, you could make some "C" channel dividers that you could slide a piece of 2X8 (2 X whatever) down to secure the chipper in place. (plus a tie down strap or two) The wood would slide up and out when you wanted to move the chipper.

That way you are not messing up the nice floor if the trailer, and the angle iron wouldn't affect the inside dimensions of the trailer very much at all
 
the units look mostly unused get out work them use them see they they go before you consider mating them together, often clients wish to take mulch direct for garden and the wood can be left as fire wood,,,, so follow phlibert idea if still wondering the what and if's
 
I am thinking of using a in floor cleat as is pictured here. Strategically placing them as to hold the chipper in place in one corner of the trailer. Then could either use a tie down strap or turn buckle hardware to hold it in place. And when not needed, there will be nothing in the way for putting other stuff in the trailer.
And Philbert, I like the idea of the winch (one with a remote control would even be better), but would I power it off my truck or add a battery box and battery to the trailer for its use???Tie Down Cleat 2.jpg Tie Down Cleat.jpg
 
I like the idea of the winch (one with a remote control would even be better), but would I power it off my truck or add a battery box and battery to the trailer for its use???
If you can power it off of your truck, that would be a lot simpler, and one less battery to maintain.

Ask where you buy the winch about your options.

Philbert
 
How about a HF pickup bed crane to load chipper and other heavy stuff.
 
Why not weld a mount to the front of the trailer and make it so you can remove the chipper when not needed? I would also modify the chute so it can swivle and tilt. That way you direct the chips anywhere in the bed you want within reason. Otherwise someone will be required to get in and move chip if you have a lot of material.
 
They actually make a rotating longer chute for the chipper, but hoping not to put money into a chipper that won't be for long term.
 
Asplundh here has a dump truck with a sidemount PTO chipper that blows into it's box. This is only because it tows a flat deck with a mini boom to access peoples yards and can't tow 2 trailers. I'd definitely do a temporary mount and see if it works for you before doing anything permanent.
 
They actually make a rotating longer chute for the chipper, but hoping not to put money into a chipper that won't be for long term.
A cheap welder = $250
Steel plate to fab an attachment = ~$50 or <
Miscleanious sheet metal = ~$20
An old snow blower chute = $10

Ask for opinions on how to mount it and make it functionable then rejecting opinions = Priceless.

The only area I would consider mounting it is outside the bed close to where its sitting in the pictures. GL with your project.
 
So I am new to the business side of tree service. And so far I have not gone into debt. I am basically a one man operation with a couple of part time employees to serve as ground crew.
I was given the chipper in question so don't go on about how it is a bad or low end piece of equipment. It was free. I was also given a 35 ton splitter. Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
I am doing mostly pruning jobs with occasional tree removal. I bought a trailer to haul away the cuttings and wood. I am considering mounting the chipper into the trailer towards the front and just have it shoot the chips into the bed of trailer. Still working on how I would mount it. This way my groundies or myself can chip up the limbs and such on sight taking up less room in the trailer, leaving room for any wood over 5" in diameter.
The other option was to bring all the clipping back home and chipping them all here in the back of the lot. But then I might be filling the whole trailer up pretty quick with clippings and such.
I included some pics.
I appreciate any positive advise your willing to provide, Just save the flaming of the piece of equipment. LOL
View attachment 420310 View attachment 420311 View attachment 420312


positive advise is that's a really nice trailer which can be used to haul limbs to the dump site. which will take a third of the time compared to trying to chip them.
 
There was someone on this site a few years ago, lived in Northern Manitoba (La Pas I think), who mounted a side tipping 5 yard box on a trailer. He then mounted a 9" chipper on the trailer behind that, and had room next to the chipper for his mini loader or stumper. He was able to chip into the box and when he went to the dump, the box tipped sideways so he didn't have to move anything. I thought it was a slick unit for what he did. There was a pic on the site. I haven't seen it for a while, may have been lost when the site crashed.

I would put a plate on the tongue of the trailer and mount the chipper there. Then it doesn't get in way when you empty the trailer and you can use the trailer without having to move the chipper. You may have to extend the tongue
 
I think you are referring to Holmen tree. He's on the other sites. I like his setup but seems like towing empty would leave the tail wagging the dog. Imo the chipper needs to be up front with curbside feed. The bandit was up front and had a mount to allow the chipper to swivel.
My issue is weight. The truck and chipper in my sig is far over the trucks gvwr. With 10-12cu/yd of chips I am looking at 15 or 16k lbs of truck, tools and chips. Now another 2t for the chipper and still having logs to deal with in a removal scenario and I avoid the dot like the plague.
I sketched up transferring everything over to a 7ton equipment trailer, chip box, toolbox, and sideways mounted chipper. A flatbed on the f350 for logs,etc and I should be close to being legal (gcvwr) even with the full loads.
Could turn into an expensive project quickly. Just my 2¢
 
I'm working on a leaf collector that's setup a lot like that chipper. I'm going to mount it to the tongue of the trailer with a detachable mount. That would be better than having to take it everywhere you take the trailer.

As for the size of the chipper, it's nice to be able to chip everything, but if you've got a small chipper 3" then what matters is that it'll chip fast, other than that the type of wood you're cutting. If it's good for fire wood you can sell it, if it's pine it's harder to get rid of. So you're better off with a chipper that will make salad of whatever you put through it.
 
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