Anyone know the reason sheargrabs tend to have cranked tines?probably the strongest on the market
http://www.tigheengineering.com/product.php?cat=agriculture
the big question is straight or cranked tines
Prodig are making serious kit
We have a Prodig with hardox tines,going well so far.Prodig are making serious kit
Cranked tines let you slide a grab off in a feeding passage and keep it intact to stop heating. 2m Redrock here and an old McHale. No complaints with either. We've never broken a tine though both just have KV conus tines. Redrock handles 2000 tons a year for past three years.Anyone know the reason sheargrabs tend to have cranked tines?
Will have to be hardox tines,I think
One tine snapped dropped into 10 ton of mix and ripped feedbeit on wat out
Looked at Tighe v dear and not hardox
Restock not hardox and pricey
Have a few of Allbutt stuff and would be well impressed with the build
Prodig 300 kg lighter than same size Allbutt
Any one using a slurry cat shear grad
We had a tine break and jammed in the auger, wrote off gearbox, £4500 later...Will have to be hardox tines,I think
One tine snapped dropped into 10 ton of mix and ripped feedbeit on wat out
Looked at Tighe v dear and not hardox
Restock not hardox and pricey
Have a few of Allbutt stuff and would be well impressed with the build
Prodig 300 kg lighter than same size Allbutt
Any one using a slurry cat shear grad
Cranked tines let you slide a grab off in a feeding passage and keep it intact to stop heating. .