Doug_Norman
Bronze Member
I posted this as an answer to another thread, but thought I'd add it here in case anyone is looking at Bearcat chippers.
I just bought a chipper and wanted to share what I have learned. I was first interested in the Bearcat 70554. A neighbor up the road has one and gave me a demo. I think it's a great machine - he ran a 6 foot long 4 inch diameter cedar post through it. He has a 35 HP Mahindra tractor. What I liked is that it looks to be a very well built machine. The only thing that made me hesitate was that it dumps the chips on the ground sort of below the unit. That means as the pile builds, you have to move the tractor. They make an add-on blower for this machine, but it runs about $1000 and no dealer had one.
I was also intrigued by the self-feed models I read about on other threads. However, it sounded like the lesser priced models have their share of issues.
I finally ended up buying a Bearcat 73554. I saw this one on the Bearcat web site - no dealer had one in stock. I think it is based on the 70554, but it looks completely different and has a built-in blower with a snout that pivots 360 degrees. It also has a lever to adjust the chip size (the 70554 requires installing a different screen for each chip size). Their list price for this is about $1000 more than the 70554. We gave the 73554 its first run last night (after a little adjustment of the pulley guard). It's a solid machine. We ran about 50 cedar trees through it. They range from 5" on down. Most were in the 3 to 4 inch range. I have a Kubota L3130 HST and a 5" trunk was pushing it. I had to run the PTO at 500, and learned that it was best to do 4 or 5 foot sections if the logs were 5". Luckily most of my big trees will become fence posts. I did have to trim trees down to fit in the chute - it's not like you could shove a Christmas tree through it. But if you can shove it in the chute, it can chew it up. We also put some brush through the brush hopper. The manual said to put nothing larger than 3/4", but we probably exceeded that. It does a good job, but it is actually a little scarier than the chipper. It also uses different blades that basically thrash everything, so the chips aren't as clean and small. Enough rambling - here's the bottom line:
70554
5" chipper
brush hopper
73554
5" chipper
brush hopper
360 degree blower
adjustable chip size
I paid $3650 for the 73554. Luckily my dealer got one in stock just so I could look at it. I think Bearcat does a good job servicing their dealers, and they are responsive on their web site. I even had a rep call me. I told him to talk my dealer into buying one. A week later the dealer had it. My dealer also delivered it to me 35 miles away. Time will tell how this machine lasts, but my neighbor has been happy with his for over a year.
I just bought a chipper and wanted to share what I have learned. I was first interested in the Bearcat 70554. A neighbor up the road has one and gave me a demo. I think it's a great machine - he ran a 6 foot long 4 inch diameter cedar post through it. He has a 35 HP Mahindra tractor. What I liked is that it looks to be a very well built machine. The only thing that made me hesitate was that it dumps the chips on the ground sort of below the unit. That means as the pile builds, you have to move the tractor. They make an add-on blower for this machine, but it runs about $1000 and no dealer had one.
I was also intrigued by the self-feed models I read about on other threads. However, it sounded like the lesser priced models have their share of issues.
I finally ended up buying a Bearcat 73554. I saw this one on the Bearcat web site - no dealer had one in stock. I think it is based on the 70554, but it looks completely different and has a built-in blower with a snout that pivots 360 degrees. It also has a lever to adjust the chip size (the 70554 requires installing a different screen for each chip size). Their list price for this is about $1000 more than the 70554. We gave the 73554 its first run last night (after a little adjustment of the pulley guard). It's a solid machine. We ran about 50 cedar trees through it. They range from 5" on down. Most were in the 3 to 4 inch range. I have a Kubota L3130 HST and a 5" trunk was pushing it. I had to run the PTO at 500, and learned that it was best to do 4 or 5 foot sections if the logs were 5". Luckily most of my big trees will become fence posts. I did have to trim trees down to fit in the chute - it's not like you could shove a Christmas tree through it. But if you can shove it in the chute, it can chew it up. We also put some brush through the brush hopper. The manual said to put nothing larger than 3/4", but we probably exceeded that. It does a good job, but it is actually a little scarier than the chipper. It also uses different blades that basically thrash everything, so the chips aren't as clean and small. Enough rambling - here's the bottom line:
70554
5" chipper
brush hopper
73554
5" chipper
brush hopper
360 degree blower
adjustable chip size
I paid $3650 for the 73554. Luckily my dealer got one in stock just so I could look at it. I think Bearcat does a good job servicing their dealers, and they are responsive on their web site. I even had a rep call me. I told him to talk my dealer into buying one. A week later the dealer had it. My dealer also delivered it to me 35 miles away. Time will tell how this machine lasts, but my neighbor has been happy with his for over a year.