We didn’t invent wood chippers - we just perfected it! TOMCAT Chippers designs & manufactures robust, reliable and durable wood chippers since 2009. Our factory is located in Worcester, Western Cape, South Africa. Our product line includes compost turners, screen chippers, large capacity chipper shredders, pallet waste shredders, stump grinders, log splitters and tip trailers. Integrity, honesty and simplicity are synonymous with TOMCAT Wood Chippers and after sales service & product support are the cornerstone of our brand. As the need and demand for our product grows annually across the globe we expand our dealer network accordingly to provide our clients with the same world class product support we offer at home base. In 2023, our TOMCAT equipment is sold across the African continent with active service dealers in Australia, South America and across all the provinces of South Africa. We also regularly export to Mozambique, Botswana, Seychelles, Tanzania, Kenya, Zambia & Madagascar.
Yes it definitely does. The farm where this video was made has been visited recently and there's a distinct difference in the growth between vineyards where the stones was crushed and in the vineyards where it was not. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GUHuA0m9WYI.html
I have rocky field. I want to convert the rocks into soil. Can i use it for my farm? Is it available in India?? What will be the price in Indian rupees??
The most significant advantage is that the soil is level and the orchard is 100% accessible. This alone saves the farmer thousands of $$ annually in repair cost on damages done on tractors, spraycarts and other implements. The only other way (and traditionally it has been done this way for decades) is to remove all the stones by hand which costs way more than the Stone Crusher because labor is expensive and it takes very long.
would be cool to see some research if there are benefits to having the crushed minerals remain in the soil (but grind up a lot of worms and useful critters in the process) vs. mechanically collecting the rocks to be taken away permanently. Bonus round: does crushed rock absorb CO2 better/quicker than rocks that just wither away over time.
Would rather hear if the engine is lugging than the music. Also why is there always someone on the side of the machine? Does it take two people to operate?