Processing Material
Read and understand the warnings listed in “
Section
1 General Safety Rules” before operating this
shredder-chipper.
•
Your shredder-chipper can process dry or green material.
•
Green material will process quicker and easier than dry material.
•
Soft wood processes easier than hard wood.
•
Your operator experience will teach you how different materials chip/shred and how fast you can process different materials.
•
Most materials process well with the standard screen provided with the shredder-chipper.
•
It is best to trim off any side twigs from the main branch that you are chipping.
•
When chipping branches, sometimes a tail will remain at the end of a branch. To avoid this, rotate the branch while feeding it into
the Chipper Hopper. Rotating the branch as you feed it into the machine will improve chipping performance.
•
Use caution with small diameter green saplings and branches less than 1" in diameter. Chip these grouped or bundled together to
provide support for each other. If the material is 1" or larger, feed only one at a time into the Chipper Hopper.
•
Make sure the shredder-chipper finishes processing material in the Hopper(s) before shutting the Engine off.
Using the Chipper Hopper
The Chipper Hopper is mounted on the side of the machine and is designed to chip the larger, heavier materials that the Shredder
Hopper isn’t designed to handle. The revolving Chipper Knife mounted on a Rotor turns branches fed into the Hopper into “chips”.
The Chipper can chip twigs and branches ranging in size from 1" to 2-1/2" in diameter. Cut your materials into manageable lengths
of no more than five or six feet long
before
feeding them into the Chipper Hopper.
The Chipper Hopper must be securely bolted to the side of your shredder-chipper before using the machine!
•
Feed the branch into Chipper Hopper keeping the branch at the same angle as the Chipper Hopper.
•
As the branch becomes short and is at the outside edge of the Chipper Hopper, finish processing it by pushing it in with the next
branch.
•
Do not force material into the Chipper. If the machine does not chip well, the Chipper Knife may need sharpening or to be
replaced.
•
Extremely hard knots will not process very well. Push any short stubs that have not self-fed through the Chipper, with the next
branch to be chipped.
Never throw remaining stubs or knots into the Shredder Hopper; damage will result.
•
Overloading the Chipper Hopper will cause the rotor speed to decrease. If you hear the Engine RPM decreasing, stop feeding
material into the Chipper Hopper until the Engine has returned to full speed.
•
NEVER allow processed material to build up within 3" of the Discharge opening. Move the shredder-chipper or the pile as needed.
Failure to do so could result in unnecessary jamming of the machine.
•
To move a pile of processed material, first shut off the Engine, and use a spade, rake, or long handle tool;
NEVER
use your hands
or feet!
12
Summary of Contents for SC300M
Page 25: ...Schematic BASIC MACHINE ASSEMBLY 25...
Page 29: ...Schematic HOPPERS AND SCREEN 29 5...
Page 31: ...Schematic SHREDDER HOPPER 31...
Page 33: ...Schematic ROTOR ASSEMBLY 33...
Page 34: ...Notes 34...
Page 35: ...Notes 35...