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Teagle muck spreader
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<blockquote data-quote="ollie989898" data-source="post: 6147886" data-attributes="member: 54866"><p>Wooden greedy boards- cheap and easy to replace if they get damaged/destroyed so almost sacrificial I guess. Wheel options are surely at the choice of the buyer? Did it have a sprung drawbar? I know some bottom end spreaders and other things don't, I wouldn't buy a spreader without one myself.</p><p></p><p>I don't see a slip clutch as being advantageous myself- a shearbolt is far more idiot proof and is basically zero maintenance. Like many I have spent days and days and days spreading dung and never even had a single shearbolt go. Depends on what you are loading them with to be honest. People whose dung contains enough foreign bodies that you need a slip clutch on your spreader probably should be encouraged not to lace their muck with concrete blocks and sleepers so much.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ollie989898, post: 6147886, member: 54866"] Wooden greedy boards- cheap and easy to replace if they get damaged/destroyed so almost sacrificial I guess. Wheel options are surely at the choice of the buyer? Did it have a sprung drawbar? I know some bottom end spreaders and other things don't, I wouldn't buy a spreader without one myself. I don't see a slip clutch as being advantageous myself- a shearbolt is far more idiot proof and is basically zero maintenance. Like many I have spent days and days and days spreading dung and never even had a single shearbolt go. Depends on what you are loading them with to be honest. People whose dung contains enough foreign bodies that you need a slip clutch on your spreader probably should be encouraged not to lace their muck with concrete blocks and sleepers so much. [/QUOTE]
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Teagle muck spreader
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