PTO Wood Chipper Comparison Woodland Mills WC88 vs Jinma
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
- Here's a comparison video between my Woodland Mills WC88 chipper and my Jinma 8inch chipper
They are both great machines. My goal is to point out the differences between the two, not to declare a winner. I like them both for different reasons.
here is a video showing the intricacies of the Jinma • Jinma Wood Chipper Ser...
Here is a video showing the intricacies of the Woodland Mills. • Woodland Mills WC88 Wo...
For anybody wondering, he mentioned a massey 135 and Ford 3000. Both would handle the wc88 just fine. I run mine with an International B-414 diesel. It is right around that 35 pto hp zone, and it handles it great. Pulls hard on big wood, but im not running 8" through it unless it is soft, maybe punky already, and i don't think these chippers would hold up to constantly feeding big wood into them, especially if it is hardwood. And, i am like most guys running these things, 5-6" is usually going to firewood, and the bigger opening is just a better way to squeeze branches through. I really like the idea of the ones that have more like 8×10 infeed opening or even bigger, but wider one way.
Woodland Mills has that newer 810 that is made like that. I'm not sure how well it is working out for them. It is direct drive, which gets the infeed down a little lower and is supposed let the torque of the tractor pull through better, but it looks like too many moving parts for my taste. I like the 88.
I bought the wc88 over other brands in part because of how high that chute gets the chips. I wanted to be able to load my dump truck, and it works great for that.
I can tell you how to fix the infeed roller from stopping. There is a plastic cap on the hydraulic directional control valve. Unscrew that, there is a 22 mm jam nut . Loosen that . Then take a 6 mm hex key, and turn to tighten clockwise. That should stop it from vibrating the red control arm to neutral. You may have to adjust it a few times to get it right.
Thanks, I watched a video about that.
I have same problem with my Woodland Mills. Branches catch on the safety bar and stop the rollers. There is an adjustment for this on the hydraulic valve.
yes, I read about that. next time I have it out I will do that.
Just found your channel I'm based in the UK and we've just brought the woodland mill 8 inch chipper and we absolutely love it. We used to burn all the branches but decided to go the chipper route as we can use the chips in our muddy footpaths and gateways around the farm. Looking forward to seeing more. Kind regards to your family from across the pond
Thanks for watching!
I wish my wc88 had a lever to raise that infeed wheel up...i might have to look into modding it one day. You can't easily and/or safely feed short pieces like punky firewood rounds or splits.
Its one thing I miss about my old Jinma
Good morning, this is WoodMaxx Power Equipment. The Jinma chipper is a completely different brand and holds different characteristics than our WM PTO wood chippers and we do not approve of the direct correlation between the two. The Jinma is not a WoodMaxx wood chipper and the overall experience, functionality, and appearance are totally different. We would greatly appreciate the name removal as we don't want to confuse future customers or mislead them. If you're looking to purchase a WoodMaxx chipper in the future, we're happy to assist you and answer any questions you have. Thank you.
I have honored your request. Thanks for watching.
I would buy a woodman chipper just because of the kind way that woodmaxx handled this situation it shows there confidence...
great video.... and good job woodmaxx
@@ClaremontClassicGarage I'm glad you've shown the differenced between the two units. I gave you a "like" and @WoodMaxxPower needs to get their panties out of a wad. I learned a lot from your demonstration.
@@themichaelcreed Thanks. I can't speak for them but it is what it is.
I want the Massey too 😂. Is that a Massey 50?
It is a 1952 Ferguson TEA2085.
Woodmaxx is definitely better then both of these models
until you have to change the blades
I had a woodmaxx 8h, sold it to my neighbor. I think the woodland mills is the better chipper. Once I have the woodland mills I will compare the two side by side.
Well if it's Jinma, you already know it's junk.
Lasted me 15 years and now the next guy is using it. Tough machine once you fix the infeed.