«Previous    Next»
Wood Chipper Converted To Leaf Vac-Shredder
Ron Byelich turned a used, 2-wheeled wood chipper into a trailer-mounted leaf vacuum-shredder. He uses the machine, along with a 20-ft. long, 6-in. dia. flexible hose, designed for lawn vacs or garden tractors, to suck up leaves from flower beds and around his house. The vac-shredder mounts on a small platform on front of the trailer and shreds the leaves and blows them into it. Byelich uses his Deere garden tractor to pull the 8 by 4-ft. trailer, which has 4-ft. high plywood sides and a plastic floor. The tongue sets on a homemade, 2-wheeled dolly.
He uses a backpack blower to blow leaves into big piles, then pulls the trailer alongside them and uses the hose to vacuum them up. Once the trailer is full, he shovels the shredded leaves out the back.
“It saves me a lot of work and time. I own a 1 1/2-acre lot with lots of trees, so cleaning up leaves every fall is a big job,” says Byelich. “I use the ground-up leaves for compost or haul them down the road to our county recycling center. The machine grinds the leaves into small pieces, and can convert 2 or 3 square yards of leaves down into just a couple of bushel baskets. If I want, I can also grind up small branches and blow them in with the leaves at the same time. I carry all my yard tools, including a shovel, manure fork, rake, and broom, on front of the trailer.”
This is the fourth leaf vac-shredder Byelich has built over the years. “I saved a lot of money because new commercial vacuum trailers cost $3,000 to $4,000. I spent about $600 including the cost of the trailer, which a friend built for me. Also, commercial vacuum trailers can’t be used to shred branches like my converted wood chipper can.”
He bought a 15-year-old MTD, 2-wheeled wood chipper powered by a 7 hp. gas engine for $75. It came with a small hopper for grinding small brush and leaves, and a bigger hopper for grinding tree branches. He removed the wheels and axle as well as the machine’s discharge chute, and replaced the chute with a homemade steel sleeve that extends through an opening on front of the trailer. He also removed the large hopper for grinding branches and bolted the hose and cone in its place. The machine still has its original small hopper.
“Old yard-style wood chippers are easy to find and they’re cheap,” says Byelich. “I chose the MTD model because it’s easy to service and to work on and always starts on the first or second pull. I bought the hose and cone from Tractor Supply Company for $100.”
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Ron Byelich, P.O. Box 63, Higgins Lake, Mich. 48627 (ph 989 821-9251; hdglide2011@hotmail.com).    



  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2020 - Volume #44, Issue #5