What do you reckon? hey hey
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the belles aren't much more than that and our concrete firm swear by them they must have 30 off them and they get some hammer and you get almost double what you would in a haemerlin barrow
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
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Maybe this one is different, but placky barrows always had a problem with cracking/splitting if impacted to heavily. For example, some donkey-brained labourer launching blocks into it....
Ball barrows - I always thought they were a novelty for gardeners and DIYers but awkward to push on site, compared to a standard pneumatic. The concept was invented by a certain Mr Richard Dyson before he made a fortune with fancy vacuums. Surely, if he thought a ball-barrow had potential in the trade market, he'd have been onto it years ago, wouldn't he?
Ball barrows - I always thought they were a novelty for gardeners and DIYers but awkward to push on site, compared to a standard pneumatic. The concept was invented by a certain Mr Richard Dyson before he made a fortune with fancy vacuums. Surely, if he thought a ball-barrow had potential in the trade market, he'd have been onto it years ago, wouldn't he?
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Got a couple of belle barrows 18 months ago and they are remarkably robust...no splits thus far and clean out better than steel/galv. Frames good and solid and unlike the Haemerlins, the handles don't slip off every time you tip them until you sling them in the skip and do without. Tyres seem better too.
The Haemerlins used to be a good barrow when they were an all welded frame...the bolted ones not so much.
Reckon I paid £125 each and don't think they represent bad value at all, for an every day-all day tool. Steel ones usually failed in some way after 10-12 months at maybe a little under half the cost.
The Haemerlins used to be a good barrow when they were an all welded frame...the bolted ones not so much.
Reckon I paid £125 each and don't think they represent bad value at all, for an every day-all day tool. Steel ones usually failed in some way after 10-12 months at maybe a little under half the cost.
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It's not all that long ago I chucked away one of the old barrows my dad had hung on to for, oh, at least 30 years.lutonlagerlout wrote:some of the old fellas at the allotment have 30 year old barrows,big difference then was the metal was a lot thicker,and so they last but are heavy
3mm (old 1/8") steel, folded, not pressed, weighed almost as much as a pack of bricks, but it was sound, apart from a well-perished tyre. Just too heavy for my limited needs nowadays.
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I've got two 28 year old barrows in the fleet, I'll grab a photo next week! You'll be impressed! :p
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset
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OK then.....
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm....9700905
Seriously seriously considering it! I can't see a scenario where I could only use a barrow and not use that^^^
I've had it with busting may ass. I want some energy in the evenings to enjoy my life outside work.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm....9700905
Seriously seriously considering it! I can't see a scenario where I could only use a barrow and not use that^^^
I've had it with busting may ass. I want some energy in the evenings to enjoy my life outside work.