Charlesaf3
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2006
- Messages
- 1,982
- Location
- Richmond VA & Irvington VA
- Tractor
- Kubota B3030, Kubota M59 TLB
Before I bought one, I searched all over the web for reviews, and couldn't find much, so I thought I'd put one here, though I don't really know if this is the place.
I bought the 30 ton Harbor Freight Log splitter with the 9hp robin engine for $1099. Shipping was $50 which is a ridiculous bargain out to me. I've had it for around a month, and am generally quite happy with it.
It is a case of you get what you pay for, and "some assembly required" as per most harbor freight stuff. It comes in a couple of pieces, each of which weigh around 300 odd pounds. Putting them together, especially on unlevel ground in the woods beside my driveway, was NOT fun. I'm a 6'5 strong guy, and using a farm jack I was just barely able to tilt things into place. The instructions say 2 people required for assembly, and they aren't lying. A forklift and 2 people would make the job far easier.
I had a nut missing from the package - once again typical harbor freight, but not a big deal.
Filling fluids was a pain. Many of the things about this splitter could be improved with minor design tweaks, and the fluid fills are certainly one of them. A right angle funnel, or better yet some sort of transfer pump, would have been far easier than my approach of gently tilting a 5 gallon can of hydraulic fluid into a horizontal hole. I don't think I got more than 40% of the stuff on me... Oil fill is the same joy.
Fired it up - Robin subaru engine seems really nice on initial use. Beats the **** out of Briggs and Stratton (I hate briggs and Stratton - total junk)
Run it for a little while - it's splitting green oak and tupelo very nicely. THe control lever, which you have to hold onto the whole time in forward, is very awkwardly situated. (Yet another future tweak). There is an automatic high speed return.
Then the hydraulic filter blew, and sprayed hydraulic fluid everywhere. More fun. Got a new hydraulic filter at napa for under $10 - harbor freight said they'd ship it to me, but it was on back order. We'll see... Runs fine with the new filter.
I'm really happy with it now. Yes, it could have some design improvements, but its built tough, and splits well. And the engine is subaru, not B&S. I'd definitely buy it again - it seems better than stuff I've seen for 5-600 more.
Other minor issues - the adjustable kickstand, which really requires three hands to make it trailerable. The height of the hitch couple - good 2-3' above ground.
I'll post again if I have anything to add, but currently I'm very pro. Cheaper than most 3 point stuff to boot - TSCs was $200 less, but much less powerful.
I bought the 30 ton Harbor Freight Log splitter with the 9hp robin engine for $1099. Shipping was $50 which is a ridiculous bargain out to me. I've had it for around a month, and am generally quite happy with it.
It is a case of you get what you pay for, and "some assembly required" as per most harbor freight stuff. It comes in a couple of pieces, each of which weigh around 300 odd pounds. Putting them together, especially on unlevel ground in the woods beside my driveway, was NOT fun. I'm a 6'5 strong guy, and using a farm jack I was just barely able to tilt things into place. The instructions say 2 people required for assembly, and they aren't lying. A forklift and 2 people would make the job far easier.
I had a nut missing from the package - once again typical harbor freight, but not a big deal.
Filling fluids was a pain. Many of the things about this splitter could be improved with minor design tweaks, and the fluid fills are certainly one of them. A right angle funnel, or better yet some sort of transfer pump, would have been far easier than my approach of gently tilting a 5 gallon can of hydraulic fluid into a horizontal hole. I don't think I got more than 40% of the stuff on me... Oil fill is the same joy.
Fired it up - Robin subaru engine seems really nice on initial use. Beats the **** out of Briggs and Stratton (I hate briggs and Stratton - total junk)
Run it for a little while - it's splitting green oak and tupelo very nicely. THe control lever, which you have to hold onto the whole time in forward, is very awkwardly situated. (Yet another future tweak). There is an automatic high speed return.
Then the hydraulic filter blew, and sprayed hydraulic fluid everywhere. More fun. Got a new hydraulic filter at napa for under $10 - harbor freight said they'd ship it to me, but it was on back order. We'll see... Runs fine with the new filter.
I'm really happy with it now. Yes, it could have some design improvements, but its built tough, and splits well. And the engine is subaru, not B&S. I'd definitely buy it again - it seems better than stuff I've seen for 5-600 more.
Other minor issues - the adjustable kickstand, which really requires three hands to make it trailerable. The height of the hitch couple - good 2-3' above ground.
I'll post again if I have anything to add, but currently I'm very pro. Cheaper than most 3 point stuff to boot - TSCs was $200 less, but much less powerful.