It's a really impressive machine. It's an orchestra to run one but I'm sure you can feel everything that machine is doing and when it's happening. You got my respect brother. Takes a smart cool customer to run that.
Thanks Erik . Yes it’s like anything if you run one for awhile all the little vibrations and sounds indicate things are going good or I need to stop and investigate a problem. It is fun but intense.
Whereabouts are you from? Seems like there are always one or two of them floating around for sale here on the west coast. Someone on the Oregon coast, private party on Facebook marketplace, and one on craigslist not too long ago Cascade Trader I believe has one for sale
I max out at two levers. I can do a couple joysticks on a skid steer or something of that nature. It's not that I can't do that many, I just won't. I would much rather wade into the brush with a saw and it's various accessories. 👍
I hear you there. It really isn’t as complicated as it seems . It’s mainly remembering what everything does and having good muscle memory. I really only use three or four levers during the day , but some days more. Thanks for watching and commenting
So I have logged for many years and think you missed the mark here it totally different when downhill logging over a support with a fall block on a true wild byte Slackline Ryder block job next time get it corrected would you
It took me a couple weeks to get the basics and I’d say a few months to get quick at grabbing levers. The whistles took a long time to get down pat, probably 3 months