506 of 517 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good enough for twigs and leaves -- excellent value, December 15, 2006
Summary:
Works well for my purposes, which include a lot of twigs, leaves, brush, and ½" to ¾" sticks. The mulch produced is much finer than I expected, and is really smaller than your typical double-shredded commercial mulch. Assembly took 1½ hours, and was pretty straightforward, but no thanks to the instructions supplied with the unit. For the price, this is a very good unit.
Shipment:
Unit came 2 days after I ordered. Surprised at the speed for free shipping, but I noticed Amazon used 2nd day UPS air. I don't know if this was expedited shipping because of the nearness of Xmas, but I was very pleased with the timeliness.
Assembly:
Instructions that came with the unit were very sparse and provided very limited illustrations and narrative to help the consumer. A clear and detailed picture or diagram would help a lot.
However, after staring at the photo on the box, and looking at the various parts that came in the box, assembly was simple enough for my son and I (you really need 2 people). Thinking back on it, here is the sequence that should be followed (little of this is in the instruction manual):
1. First start with the leg, axle, and wheel assembly. Look at the axle, and you will see two hex bolts with no apparent purpose screwed into the axle: one at each end. These are adjustment blanks that should be moved in order to properly align the leg, axle, and wheel assembly to accept the body of the shredder. You will notice an empty threaded hole immediately adjacent to these hex bolts, each a bit closer to the ends of the axle. Unscrew the hex bolts using the provided hex-key and move them to the adjacent holes that are closer to the end of the axle.
2. Place one wheel on the axle and secure with the supplied large flat washer followed by a cotter pin. Bend the end of the cotter pin around the axle end to secure the wheel. Do not put the other wheel on the axle yet, and don't put on the McCulloch wheel covers on either wheel yet.
3. Thread the end of the axle through the opening on one leg (it doesn't matter which one - they are symmetrical), and then use the supplied long hex bolt, lock washer and flat washer to loosely secure (hand tighten) the part of the axle closest to the attached wheel against one leg. The lock washer should be placed on the bolt first (closest to the bolt head) followed by the flat washer, then thread the bolt through the outer curved part of the leg into the threaded hole in the axle which is closest to the wheel that you put on in step 2.
4. Take the other leg and attach it to the other end of the axle using the remaining long hex bolt, lock washer, and flat washer -- hand tighten.
5. Take the remaining wheel and secure it on the remaining axle end with the supplied large flat washer followed by a cotter pin. Do not put either wheel cover on until the end (just in case you did something wrong or you aren't quite satisfied with the alignment).
6. Insert the solid aluminum barrels (each with two smooth-bore holes) into the end of the leg, axle, and wheel assembly that will mate with the shredder body. Line up the barrel holes with the leg holes. This provides strength at the connection point to the body. Put the leg, axle, and wheel assembly aside for the moment.
7. Now let's work on the body. Using two persons to lift, stand the shredder body up on the flat pieces of cardboard supplied in the box. Unscrew the three black plastic-knobbed hand bolts that retain the yellow metal hood onto the black shredder assembly. Remove the yellow metal hood and put it aside. You have now exposed the heads of the four hex bolts used to secure the shredder body to the leg, axle, and wheel assembly.
8. Using the stronger person to lift, place the black shredder assembly over the leg/axle/wheel assembly, and line up the two holes on either leg (four holes total), with the four hex bolts on the black shredder assembly. Have your partner guide the bolts through the holes. From the underside, secure the bolts using the supplied flat washers, followed by lock washers, followed by nuts -- hand tighten. Don't put the hood back on yet.
9. Eyeball the entire assembly to see that is aligned vertically and horizontally. Since you only hand-tightened the axle-leg and leg-body hex bolts, it is now pretty easy to adjust the alignment by simply moving the body relative to the legs, or moving the legs relative to the axle. Don't worry, the set-up is pretty sturdy, it would be difficult to harm anything by pushing or pulling to gain proper alignment.
10. Once you are satisfied with the alignment, tighten the two leg-axle hex bolts and four leg-body bolts using the supplied hex wrench. Use rotation tightening like you would when working on your car. Half tighten bolts on opposite ends, then ¾ tighten, and then full tighten.
11. Snap on the McCulloch wheel covers on the wheels.
12. Place the yellow metal hood back on top, and tighten the black plastic-knobbed hand bolts.
13. Place the black plastic leaf and twig receiving chute on top of the yellow metal hood, and line up the five small bolt holes. The ribbed side of the receiving chute should be facing toward the wheels. Insert and tighten the five bolts to secure the chute.
14. Turn off the switch before you plug in the shredder.
Operation:
1. For brush and sticks under ¾" this unit rocks! I am quite pleased how quickly this shredder takes the little stuff and spits out very finely shredded mulch.
2. For brush and sticks 1" to 1½" - be careful! It is very easy to jam this unit by feeding big twigs too quickly. After jamming the unit, you need to turn it off, unplug it, remove the yellow metal hood by undoing the three black plastic-knobbed hand bolts, and then clearing the debris from the cutting blades or the large stick feeding tube on the yellow hood. I have found that the best approach is to feed twigs of this size using a feed a little, pause a little, feed a little, pause a little approach. You can actually do this pretty quickly once you get used to what the machine can handle as far as pace.
3. Leaves mixed with sticks seem to shred finer than leaves by themselves through the top chute.
4. Twigs by themselves, regardless of size, are consumed most quickly through the side feeder tube versus the top chute.
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271 of 281 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty but functional?, January 21, 2007
I chose the McCulloch shredder for my garden for 3 reasons: 1)price, 2) ease of maneuverability and 3) lack of annoying noise to my neighbors because of the electric motor. These features have all proven to be realized with this machine.
I have, however, a few regrets for having chosen this unit. Assembly was not very straightforward. The tubular leg/wheel assembly required some additional tools and head-scratching to accomplish. Once assembled, I was unable to successfully attach the chute to the chopping mechanism. On investigation, I found the spring-loaded bolts had been improperly assembled, and I was able to correct that by relocating one of the nuts and reassembling the mechanism.
Not shown in the illustrations is the fact that what appears to be a 12" chute into which you dump material for shredding, there is, instead, a black plastic safety cover which covers the top of the chute which has only a couple of small openings thru which debris must be passed (generally with difficulty) into the chamber for chopping. It does include a rather clever plastic "shove-er" that is used to force the debris thru the slot.
The instruction booklet advises one to use this machine only with dry material. In trying to chop up the corn stalks from my garden, it worked fine until I got to the roots (still quite filled with moisture) with a bit of ground on them. The "out" chute from the choppers is rather small and quickly became stopped up with the ground and wet chopped material. Clearing this requires unscrewing the 3 knobbed/bolts of the chute. One must then clear away the debris from the knives, and reattaching the chute. It is NOT a quick and easy maneuver. ALSO, watch those knives! They are very sharp and I did manage to nick a finger and shed some blood in the cleaning process.
This chopper is very attractive yellow, relatively inexpensive, very quiet, very portable, but from a practical standpoint, I would hate to be asked to chop an entire lawn of leaves in it. Very much like eating peas with a toothpick.
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55 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not for mulching leaves, November 18, 2006
I had read all of the reviews on this site and others and felt that this would be the best bet to meet my needs: chip the wheelbarrow full of branches that fall with every storm, and shred/mulch all the leaves generated in my half acre of yard in the Fall so that I could mulch my flower beds while clearing the yard.
The machine is definitely well built - but it's not well designed. Although not terribly difficult, the instructions and accompanying photographs don't make it clear that you need to bend the legs in to fit properly to the motor. It would be tough to manage the very heavy motor, the pressure needed to align the leg to their attachment holes, and drive the bolts by oneself.
Issues in use: The hopper is too small - about half of every bunch of leaves I deposited fell back out. The sloped hopper is a good idea, but in application it served only to annoy me. I had to nudge/push every rakeful (real word?) of leaves through the narrow gap in the hopper. The provided plastic shovel/pusher works pretty well, but this is very time consuming. Before long the chute was full of leaves and the shovel was too short to nudge them loose. Typically by the time this happens the blades had become jammed with debris (no, I wasn't shredding wet leaves) and the circuit breaker tripped. Three times it tripped my house fuse, twice the units. Each time I had to take off the chute to clear the jams and was able to clear the chute at the same time. The chute is attached to the motor with three large thumb screws, so within 5 minutes you can have it apart, cleared and back together. The discharge opening became jammed with debris just as often as the chute and the blades, so every 5-10 minutes you have to disassemble the unit to clear these three clogged, but vital, pathways. The chipper did well with limbs and branches less than an inch in diameter, but larger than this, or pushing a one inch branch too quickly, will jam the machine and trip the circuit breaker (did this twice).
If this is to be a truly useful leaf shredder it needs a larger hopper that feeds leaves more consistently through the chute. I can't imagine the discharge jams would be any less frequent had I only been chipping branches, so improving this area is also needed. The wheels are nice, and at 70+lbs nearly essential, but a handle would be helpful, too. I like the safety switch, but when removed it is pretty small and easily lost. Perhaps a lanyard could be attached to it to make it easier to carry/store when not on the machine's switch? It would be nice if a catch bag came with the unit - but then again, that would be one more thing you'd have to remove every 5-10 minutes when you take the thing apart to clear jams.
I'm still giving this chipper 3 stars as it would probably be better at chipping brush than leaves - but I bought it specifically to mulch leaves and it failed to meet that expectation. After four frustrating hours, and only one bag of mulch generated, I'm returning it.
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