24 • Section 4 — Before You Operate…
• Position the chipper in an area free of flammable
materials to reduce the risk of starting a fire from
sparks emitted from the engine exhaust or heat.
Danger
Death or serious injury will result from contact with
or proximity to equipment that has become electri-
cally energized. Maintain safe clearances from all
energized conductors and any grounded device,
material, or equipment.
An electrically energized tow vehicle (such as an aerial
device or crane) can also energize the chipper and will
cause death or serious injury. Never approach a chipper
that is connected to a vehicle operating in the proximity
of power lines.
• Confirm that all operators are wearing the proper
clothes and personal protective equipment.
• Restrict all personnel, except the operators feeding
the chipper, from the feed and discharge areas of
the chipper.
Warning
Death or serious injury can result from airborne
materials. Make sure no personnel are in the path of
material that might be discharged from chipper.
Make sure pedestrian traffic, spectators, or any other
personnel not operating the chipper are prevented from
entering the work area around the chipper, or the chip
-
per operational area. Secure and maintain an adequate
work zone to make sure that material being fed, flying
debris, and chips can not come in contact with those not
operating the chipper.
The action of chipping produces projectiles such as chips
and unchipped debris (sticks, limbs, brush, etc.) that can
cause serious injury from both the discharge chute as
well as the infeed chute.
• Set the chipper up on level ground with no stumps
or trip hazards in the loading area. During chipper
operation keep the loading area free of limbs, tools,
or other objects which may become a trip hazard.
• Confirm all operators are properly trained, have read
and understand all placards and decals, and are
authorized by the employer.
• Make sure that all tools, ropes, and other work re
-
lated objects are clear of the chipper and the chip-
per operational area and cannot come into contact
or be drug into the chipper with the brush. Ropes,
especially climbing ropes attached to someone, can
result in death or serious injury.
Notice
The chipper operational area is the area around the
chipper that has the potential for flying debris from
the discharge chute or infeed chute and has the
potential for material to be engaged by the chipper
or to be fed by an operator into the chipper (material
being dragged to the chipper).
Brush Preparation
Warning
Death, serious injury, and/or property damage can
result from feeding material that is not wood into
the chipper. Inspect all material before it is fed into
the chipper.
Inspect brush for non-wood material such as anything
made of metal, glass, or stone. Feeding such materials
into the chipper will not only damage the cutting blades,
they can even shatter, scattering blade fragments.
Remove vines from the material being chipped and dis
-
pose of properly. Do not leave vines in the area around
the chipper and do not attempt to place vines into the
chipper. Material clothing or personnel entangled in vines
can result in death or serious injury. Vines may hide
foreign materials that can cause property damage.
Inspecting and organizing the brush prior to chipping
will allow the job to be performed more efficiently and
provide added safety in performing the job by minimizing
the danger of foreign material, vines, etc., from entering
the chipper. Pretrimming and proper delimbing will allow
the brush to be drawn easily through the chipper.
• Arrange trees, tree limbs, or brush with the cut ends
facing the chipper infeed chute.
• Do not cut the trees, tree limbs, or brush into short
pieces, i.e., short logs or sticks.
• Do cut the trees, tree limbs, or brush into the longest
lengths that can be safely and easily handled. This will
reduce the number of pieces of material that have to
be handled and fed into the chipper and will reduce
the time required to perform the job. Cut wood at an
angle to help ease the feed roller open and facilitate
feeding. Chipper performance is best when the feed
wheels are securely gripping the material as it is
feeding into the cutter.
Summary of Contents for DRM 12
Page 3: ......
Page 7: ...2 Section 1 Introduction...
Page 17: ...12 Section 3 Safety Rear View Top View Bottom View 12 5 22 19 10 23 10 17 30 20 3 2 30...
Page 18: ...Section 3 Safety 13 4 8 7 2 3 970116658 1 6 5...
Page 19: ...14 Section 3 Safety 970116649 970116652 12 14 13 10 11 9...
Page 21: ...16 Section 3 Safety D G G D 25 26 24 27 23 22...
Page 22: ...Section 3 Safety 17 970137595 3X 30 31 28 29...
Page 23: ...18 Section 3 Safety...
Page 41: ...36 Section 6 Care of the Unit...
Page 62: ...Appendix...
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Page 79: ...16 Appendix Glossary...
Page 83: ...Appendix Daily Preoperational Checklist...
Page 85: ...Appendix Preventive Maintenance and Inspection Checklist...
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Page 96: ...07 13 970413443 A 2A PAGE 1 OF 2 ASSEMBLY FEED SYSTEM HYDRAULIC LIFT DRM 12...
Page 99: ...07 13 970413407 A 3A PAGE 1 OF 4 ASSEMBLY FEED CONTROL HYDRAULIC LIFT DRM 12...
Page 103: ...08 13 970485929 A 4A PAGE 1 OF 3 ASSEMBLY HAND CRANK CHUTE ROTATION DRUM CHIPPER...
Page 108: ...07 13 970413409 A 5A PAGE 1 OF 3 ASSEMBLY POWER SYSTEM KUBOTA 67 HP 74 HP 99 HP DIESEL DRM 12...
Page 113: ...07 13 970413438 A 6A PAGE 1 OF 4 FINAL ASSEMBLY DRM 12...
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Page 138: ...79A PAGE 1 OF 3 05 13 970457633 A ASSEMBLY FUEL SYSTEM DRM12 CFD1217...