Post hole diggers
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cant reply to tools and plant ted,but i think we discussed them b4 you joined and they are utter rubbish
the ones on machines and tractors can do the job but hand held ,forget it mate
i hired a stihl one to do 10 holes in my back garden and it damm near killed me and my mate
every time you hit a brick or flint ,piiiiieeeeeeeewwwww
off you go flying
theres usually loads of them for sale on ebay that tells its own story
cheers LLL
the ones on machines and tractors can do the job but hand held ,forget it mate
i hired a stihl one to do 10 holes in my back garden and it damm near killed me and my mate
every time you hit a brick or flint ,piiiiieeeeeeeewwwww
off you go flying
theres usually loads of them for sale on ebay that tells its own story
cheers LLL
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- Location: Edinburgh
Ive used the exact same model Ted, and when we concluded it was a waste of time we sent a guy away with it to dig a couple thousand holes for shrubs lol.
To do a field fence, if its not big you can be just aswell belting the posts in with a mel imo.
You can hire small tractors with the larger augers on the back, they are a bit better, or if a mini digger is easier to get hold of, you can get hydraulic augers for them, altho if they get jammed, it can be a challenge getting them back out sometimes.
We do alot of fencing, and we dont use them. A few outfits have medium range tractors ( 60 - 90 hp range ) with post thumpers on the back. If the lads doing the work take the time and know how to use the thing it can do a good job, if they dont, the posts could be all over the place.
Also, dont go doing the no1 mistake of all stable yards up here; dont put post and rail fencing up to keep horses in, horses love to chew the timber rails. Thats spoken as from experience of doing the job, and growing up on farms :p
To do a field fence, if its not big you can be just aswell belting the posts in with a mel imo.
You can hire small tractors with the larger augers on the back, they are a bit better, or if a mini digger is easier to get hold of, you can get hydraulic augers for them, altho if they get jammed, it can be a challenge getting them back out sometimes.
We do alot of fencing, and we dont use them. A few outfits have medium range tractors ( 60 - 90 hp range ) with post thumpers on the back. If the lads doing the work take the time and know how to use the thing it can do a good job, if they dont, the posts could be all over the place.
Also, dont go doing the no1 mistake of all stable yards up here; dont put post and rail fencing up to keep horses in, horses love to chew the timber rails. Thats spoken as from experience of doing the job, and growing up on farms :p
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LLL
I got a full refund today. Apparently the man in charge of refunds left HSS which is why they took so long to reimburse me. I have deleted the copy of the letter in my post above as HSS have behaved fine now IMO. I don't think i should tarnish their rep by keeping a letter up if they have responded professionally to it.
But I wouldn't hire that machine again!
I got a full refund today. Apparently the man in charge of refunds left HSS which is why they took so long to reimburse me. I have deleted the copy of the letter in my post above as HSS have behaved fine now IMO. I don't think i should tarnish their rep by keeping a letter up if they have responded professionally to it.
But I wouldn't hire that machine again!
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Borrowed this little home-made post basher - built by the Red Rhino bloke, who then lost interest and pushed on with his crusher project. Small 4-stroke engine works the hydraulics - can be towed by car. Worked great with regular half round pointed stakes - to be honest it struggled a bit with the 130x80 posts, about ten minutes per post, but at least no digging ! Do you think there's a future for something like this, or are they out there already?
"Meet the new boss - same as the old boss - We all get fooled again"
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Like a mini pile-driver.
Have used one on the back of a tractor. Works very well.
Have used one on the back of a tractor. Works very well.
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset
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Of course not! :laugh:lutonlagerlout wrote:Like a mini pile-driver.
you bragging again dave???
LLL
RW Gale Ltd - Civils & Surfacing Contractors based in Somerset
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