Shredders
Posted: Thu Sep 17, 2009 11:34 am
I used to do a lot of work with my late mother in her garden which had and still has a lot of woody shrubs. We reduced the prunings to small lengths so that the stuff would fit into the green bin or sacks.
I bought a shredder for a variety of reasons. I think the principal reason was to aid composting, reducing the twiggy element of the final product, partly out of curiosity, partly to speed and aid the composting. It was also after KG did a review of shredders last year. I did not find this particularly helpful, I confess, I would have liked to have received more information; about why shredding is helpful, more about the variety of mechanisms and if this affects how the resulting product.
The one I bought has as its key component a spinning disc with blades, much like a food processor. And similarly a feed tube is there to keep your fingers sway from the business parts. Other machines must operate differently, I can see that a mangle type, crushing the material put through would work quite well, particularly if the rollers are serrated would prepare material for composting very well and be operable by .hand. Useful on the plot where there is no power. Some of the machine pictured in the KG article look as if their mechanism is like that of a paper shredder.
The machine I bought has a tall feed chute (funnel in the manual) and obviously a waste chute too. Both are sized and shaped to keep your fingers well away from the business section. The machine can be opened, with an interlock, allowing you to clear the chutes. Safety is thoroughly covered with an overload/blockage circuit breaker.
The whole item has three legs which are easily removable and then the beast will fit into the boot of my small car.
Some material is shredded better than other; raspberry canes and forsythia (long, straight lightly leafed) shred with ease, much branched material needs to be trimmed into straighter sections and heavily leafed material blocks, either in the feed chute or in the waste chute. The trimmings from the over-hanging Leylandii hedge did this, particularly once the machine was warm. The feed chute looks as if it is designed for use with a pusher/plunger as it has a keyhole shape but no such item is mentioned in the instructions. The waste chute needs work to reduce the blockages caused by the more fleshily green material (which is shredded very fine) to exit more successfully.
Certainly one thing worth remembering is that sharp blades are far more successful than blunt ones. In my case these are not cheap at about £50 per set but at least they are double sided.
Overall, I am pleased with my £20 e-bay bargain, it must have cost a considerable amount when new. If I had paid full price, I might be disappointed.
I bought a shredder for a variety of reasons. I think the principal reason was to aid composting, reducing the twiggy element of the final product, partly out of curiosity, partly to speed and aid the composting. It was also after KG did a review of shredders last year. I did not find this particularly helpful, I confess, I would have liked to have received more information; about why shredding is helpful, more about the variety of mechanisms and if this affects how the resulting product.
The one I bought has as its key component a spinning disc with blades, much like a food processor. And similarly a feed tube is there to keep your fingers sway from the business parts. Other machines must operate differently, I can see that a mangle type, crushing the material put through would work quite well, particularly if the rollers are serrated would prepare material for composting very well and be operable by .hand. Useful on the plot where there is no power. Some of the machine pictured in the KG article look as if their mechanism is like that of a paper shredder.
The machine I bought has a tall feed chute (funnel in the manual) and obviously a waste chute too. Both are sized and shaped to keep your fingers well away from the business section. The machine can be opened, with an interlock, allowing you to clear the chutes. Safety is thoroughly covered with an overload/blockage circuit breaker.
The whole item has three legs which are easily removable and then the beast will fit into the boot of my small car.
Some material is shredded better than other; raspberry canes and forsythia (long, straight lightly leafed) shred with ease, much branched material needs to be trimmed into straighter sections and heavily leafed material blocks, either in the feed chute or in the waste chute. The trimmings from the over-hanging Leylandii hedge did this, particularly once the machine was warm. The feed chute looks as if it is designed for use with a pusher/plunger as it has a keyhole shape but no such item is mentioned in the instructions. The waste chute needs work to reduce the blockages caused by the more fleshily green material (which is shredded very fine) to exit more successfully.
Certainly one thing worth remembering is that sharp blades are far more successful than blunt ones. In my case these are not cheap at about £50 per set but at least they are double sided.
Overall, I am pleased with my £20 e-bay bargain, it must have cost a considerable amount when new. If I had paid full price, I might be disappointed.