Wallenstein BX42 wood chipper in action. Chipping oak and maple cut last year was no problem and it ate a 4" x 25' fir tree in just seconds. This is a great piece of equipment....it devours wood! Running on a Kioti DK45 tractor.
I highly recommend catching the wood chips in a wagon of some sort so you can provide heat with them presuming you have a wood burning stove. A friend of mine bought a Kubota with a wood chipper and was blowing the chips into the woods until I suggested he burn them for heat. His reaction was their too small. We hooked up a utility trailer with 4 sides on it and brought a load of chips back to his house and he was surprised how easily he could burn them and completely heat his house. He now has over 3800 yards of wood chips and hasn't burned a piece of firewood since I showed him how easy it is as with a small coal shovel he has no problem feeding the stove. One feeding will last just over 6 hours so he till has coals left to add chips to in the ,morning. Food for thought. Cheers
i have the same chipper. If it starts to clog regularly check the set screws on the bearing collars. You will find them loose and the sidewall will push out on the chipper and make the gap between the blades and anvil too big and cause the cloggging.