@@JackofHaulTrades love your videos man. I’m actually not to far south of you. If you ever have a job in need of a mulcher let me know we might could meet up and give you the opportunity to give it a go.
It’s impressive of what that mulcher will do. I’ve had mine since September and I run it on a Terex PT30 enclosed cab. I’m located in Northeast Georgia and probably avg 3 jobs a week focusing on small mulching jobs such as backyards the bigger guys don’t want or it’s not worth their time unloading for. It’s actually accounts for 80% of my skid steer business now. Patience is the key in mulching material with it and knowing its limitations is key. It’s definitely a learning curve when I also run a Deere 333 with a Seppi mulching head that eats anything. My only issue is the lack of information on running one. I am the first and only one my dealer has sold one to. They have zero knowledge on running one and advice. Even the folks at Baumalight that answer the phone will tell you they have zero seat team in operating one. Makes it very challenging when you have questions. So pretty much everything I new is self taught or baptized by fire.
Did you happen to check the diameter of the base of the small tree you took out? Seemed like it was around 2-2.5” maybe? Sounded like it handled it very well. And you did very well with it time wise considering that was your first tree you’ve taken down with it I assume. Nice work. Another GA guy here in the comments
The hydraulic temp stayed around 132. I did look into the flail mulcher but at the time of purchase my dealer had a brush mower in stock that I purchased as well. I may in the future get the flail mower as well.
@@metaspencer most certainly on something like this a weed eater with a brush blade could handle most of it. A small chainsaw would be needed for the bigger tree I took down though. But one advantage is leftover material would be mulched compared to having to be removed. This was just a quick test I have a few jobs lined up for it that I will make videos on that definitely justify the need for this attachment.
@@robertkidd2858 pretty sweet man ... I also do some land clearing work with my sm100 on site, so mulching the heck out of stuff would leave a nice finished look ... cool to see!
As an owner/operator who uses a ms530m almost daily, I totally agree with Robert. If you are clearing in a commercial capacity, overall production time and finished product you can’t go wrong with mulching versus hand cutting. I mulch anything 4 inches or smaller to the ground. It’s really impressive what this thing will do. I went from a heavy duty rotary brush cutter to the baumalight mainly for 2 reasons, ( biggest reason ) is finished product and the liability with the rotary cutter slinging stuff 300 plus feet.
Just subscribed for upcoming videos! I was looking at the Baumalight website and that mulcher has different hydraulic motor options; what is the motor number on your machine?
C508 is the only option for the ms530m The gpm on the chart is the working gpm. I’ve been told that on a 15.5gpm ctx100 my working gpm is around 12.5, @ around 3500psi the chart shows around 2.5” and 1640 rpm
All you said is ok, but the drum is too small , You need double the size to make it cut ones, plus there's a big gap between the Teeth and notice you couldn't cut the tree when you do it up and down. You must move the drum left to right. I look forward to To see you get the bigger size cutting drum 🥁 👍🌴👍🌴💯
From what I’ve seen it’s 12-20 gpm. But I do know baumalight has different motors available to set it up for your machine. My sm120 has 13 gpm of aux flow.
Wow this attachment is a beast! I want it now lol. I'm impressed with it doing that bigger tree 💪
@@JackofHaulTrades love your videos man. I’m actually not to far south of you. If you ever have a job in need of a mulcher let me know we might could meet up and give you the opportunity to give it a go.
@robertkidd2858 ayee that would be awesome! What city are you in?
@@JackofHaulTradesjust outside Columbus Ga.
It’s impressive of what that mulcher will do. I’ve had mine since September and I run it on a Terex PT30 enclosed cab. I’m located in Northeast Georgia and probably avg 3 jobs a week focusing on small mulching jobs such as backyards the bigger guys don’t want or it’s not worth their time unloading for. It’s actually accounts for 80% of my skid steer business now. Patience is the key in mulching material with it and knowing its limitations is key. It’s definitely a learning curve when I also run a Deere 333 with a Seppi mulching head that eats anything.
My only issue is the lack of information on running one. I am the first and only one my dealer has sold one to. They have zero knowledge on running one and advice. Even the folks at Baumalight that answer the phone will tell you they have zero seat team in operating one. Makes it very challenging when you have questions. So pretty much everything I new is self taught or baptized by fire.
Were you able to get it with the ASV/Terex mount or did you have to also get an adapter for it? I’m considering one for our RT40
@@Fayettepropertysolutions I had to get the adapter plate for an asv. You in Georgia?
@@griggswall7204 yes sir we are!
@@Fayettepropertysolutions if want to contact me to talk more you can on lessons learned and dealer, be happy to share information.
cost of both pieces...great video...Question...are they teeth replaceable can't tell?
The mulcher is just under 10k out the door. The SM120 in the configuration I have is 42k. Yes the teeth are replaceable.
thank you
Did you happen to check the diameter of the base of the small tree you took out? Seemed like it was around 2-2.5” maybe? Sounded like it handled it very well. And you did very well with it time wise considering that was your first tree you’ve taken down with it I assume. Nice work. Another GA guy here in the comments
No I didn’t have a tape with me but I measured my hand real quick and based on the video that stump is about 5 1/2 inches. Thanks!
Looking good! How were the temperatures on the SM120? Did you look in to the Baumalight flail mower at all?
The hydraulic temp stayed around 132. I did look into the flail mulcher but at the time of purchase my dealer had a brush mower in stock that I purchased as well. I may in the future get the flail mower as well.
@@robertkidd2858 we've sold a few of the flails, they do a really good job as well. I'm happy to hear about the hydraulic temps!
what is the cost of this machine?
@@michaelframep.l.l.c.8732 it was just under $10,000 out the door.
@@robertkidd2858
Where did you get your track steer at ?
I wonder what you think about the overall value of the machine on a job like this vs. say a weed wacker or a hedge trimmer?
@@metaspencer most certainly on something like this a weed eater with a brush blade could handle most of it. A small chainsaw would be needed for the bigger tree I took down though. But one advantage is leftover material would be mulched compared to having to be removed. This was just a quick test I have a few jobs lined up for it that I will make videos on that definitely justify the need for this attachment.
@@robertkidd2858 pretty sweet man ... I also do some land clearing work with my sm100 on site, so mulching the heck out of stuff would leave a nice finished look ... cool to see!
As an owner/operator who uses a ms530m almost daily, I totally agree with Robert. If you are clearing in a commercial capacity, overall production time and finished product you can’t go wrong with mulching versus hand cutting. I mulch anything 4 inches or smaller to the ground. It’s really impressive what this thing will do. I went from a heavy duty rotary brush cutter to the baumalight mainly for 2 reasons, ( biggest reason ) is finished product and the liability with the rotary cutter slinging stuff 300 plus feet.
@@griggswall7204 I appreciate hearing your experience ... makes sense!
Just subscribed for upcoming videos!
I was looking at the Baumalight website and that mulcher has different hydraulic motor options; what is the motor number on your machine?
Mine is the C508
C508 is the only option for the ms530m
The gpm on the chart is the working gpm. I’ve been told that on a 15.5gpm ctx100 my working gpm is around 12.5, @ around 3500psi the chart shows around 2.5” and 1640 rpm
All you said is ok, but the drum is too small , You need double the size to make it cut ones, plus there's a big gap between the
Teeth and notice you couldn't cut the tree when you do it up and down. You must move the drum left to right. I look forward to
To see you get the bigger size cutting drum 🥁 👍🌴👍🌴💯
what's the minimum hydraulic flowrate to run that?
From what I’ve seen it’s 12-20 gpm. But I do know baumalight has different motors available to set it up for your machine. My sm120 has 13 gpm of aux flow.
do more videos
I have good machine,how can contact you ❤