TIGERCAT FELLERBUNCHER LX830E 5702-26

Пікірлер: 22

  • @jasonmyrstol4632
    @jasonmyrstol4632 Жыл бұрын

    Damn good operater!

  • @timmyfrierson2684
    @timmyfrierson2684 Жыл бұрын

    Another great video Patree Killer, Man I believe you liking that Tiger Cat, to me I think they have the best rubber tired and track cutters ever built and how are you liking the ER boom system I bet you like that and I think that I’m seeing that you like the tiger cat over the timber pro, lol. Hey you must cut for a chipping crew because you cut everything and put it in the pile but anyway brother you stay safe out there man and keep whacking and stacking and we will keep watching them my friend so we will see you on your next video

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Ya. Love the er boom. Yes this crew chips the smaller trees and tree tops.

  • @nuts319
    @nuts319 Жыл бұрын

    How often are you on site the same time as the skid crew? Seems you stay way ahead of them

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of the time they are there. I'm cutting for 5 different crews so it's hard to do a job without them being there now.

  • @Joelontugs
    @Joelontugs Жыл бұрын

    What do you rather run the tigercat or the timber pro?

  • @oldtimerf7602
    @oldtimerf7602 Жыл бұрын

    What's up with the crime scene ribbons

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Landowner wanted to leave those spots.

  • @kennykincaid720
    @kennykincaid720 Жыл бұрын

    What is the fuel consumption between the tiger cat and timber pro? How many gallons per hour will each brand burn? Cutting the same type of wood. I’m pricing new machines now and it’s between buying one of the two brands.

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Tigercat 8-9 and timberpro 10.5 to 11.5 gallons per hour.

  • @kennykincaid720

    @kennykincaid720

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank u. Appreciate some real world info.

  • @alexking-bq4mu
    @alexking-bq4mu Жыл бұрын

    Do you like the tigercat better the the 755d timberpro ?

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    I sold the timberpro and bought this machine after getting my lx830c running.

  • @timberslasher4899
    @timberslasher4899 Жыл бұрын

    I will let you come run my dangle on this 60%ground if I can come run that thing in some of that gravy ground for a while!!! I'm jealous!!

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't worry it's only 6 acres. I only had 7 hours in this small job. I'm in a 108 acre job now. Big timber and steep. Alot of messing around with topping and shoveling trees.

  • @timberslasher4899

    @timberslasher4899

    Жыл бұрын

    @@patreekiller Shew man.... that's me everyday... that's why I went with a 37 inch dangle and not a hotsaw.... be safe!!

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    @@timberslasher4899 I had a barsaws. Works ok but I can cut a bigger tree with my hotsaw and less down time and cheaper to run. Bars and chains suck. I get more done with the hotsaw.

  • @timberslasher4899

    @timberslasher4899

    Жыл бұрын

    @@patreekiller I know you can beat me in average terrain and average trees. But when the average tree is 33 inches plus and the ground is super steep 50%+ I can out cut a hot saw all day and out shovel. I cut with a 765 Timberpro with a big hotsaw, not sure of the inches on a job recently, he said it was the biggest Quadco, and on the big trees on steep ground I can cut them and shovel them without turning a track. I embarrassed him on steep ground cutting and shoveling with my 350k machine vs. his 700k machine. He was struggling to track up and down to hit them from multiple sides while I was feeding the cable skidders cause the grapples could do nothing there. If you dig in to my videos I prove that I can smoke the hot saws in rough conditions with big timber. If one machine was the best at everything they would only make one machine. You most surely have an all around superior machine to mine but in the mountains of Appalachia at 3000 feet and above the dangles are king. Everyone has worked the flats but people who haven't worked where I have for 30 years don't know what they are talking about. And I can work several days without grinding a chain in those conditions and I can buy ten chains for what a set of teeth cost and I can get a year plus out of a bar. Those fixed bar and chain heads like Timbco and Timberpro use are pure junk next to a dangle. And to go with all that I can cut 4 days or a little more and cut 20 loads a day on 116 gallons.....

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    @@timberslasher4899 in nice open ground with the extra reach and a lighter head it would do good. An 855 with there dangle head would be nice. I would go threw 2 to 10 chains a day because of hitting rocks. I couldn't get a bar to last thar long. My bars wore out fast. Unless I would mess with cutting the Grove deeper where the chain rides. I would love to get a lowen 30 inch cut hotsaw head. Then I could push 32 or alittle more off the stump but I'm good with what I got. I can get about 30 inches off the stump with 1 cut with my 26 inch head. Soft wood it easily does it. I cut to much junk not to have a hotsaw. I get about 300 to 500 loads on a set of teeth. I just had to many years with a barsaw head and it's kinda annoying to run one now.

  • @michaelstoltzfus8421
    @michaelstoltzfus8421 Жыл бұрын

    How about a video from the outside?

  • @patreekiller

    @patreekiller

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe someday. This only takes a second to setup.