I made a trommel! It's taken me quite a while so the photos shown are over a period of months. Other than fitting a proper motor starter and may be some paddle type things inside (like a cement mixer) it is done.
View media item 87096View media item 87097View media item 87098View media item 87099View media item 87100View media item 87101
If you want to see a vid of it in action:
Nozzle's trommel in action - Lo res
The motor is a dodgy build Chinese thing that once had a pump attached to it, the pulleys, belts and bearings I had to buy new. The rotating drum is welded together with some old bike wheel rims, a bit of old steel trellis work with chicken wire attached with wire wrapping. The rollers are some old in-line skate wheels sat in some ali U-shaped section. Ideally it could do with another pair of rollers acting on one of the wheels to control the "thrust", and keep prevent the other rollers catching on the rim edge.
I plan of rotavating the entire front and back garden and probably mixing in horse $hit and builders sand as I go. The soil here in this part of Suffolk is very clay-ey and despite living at the top of a hill, the ground saturates quickly.
Can anyone recommend anything else worth adding to the soil while it is being handled?
Nozzle
View media item 87096View media item 87097View media item 87098View media item 87099View media item 87100View media item 87101
If you want to see a vid of it in action:
Nozzle's trommel in action - Lo res
The motor is a dodgy build Chinese thing that once had a pump attached to it, the pulleys, belts and bearings I had to buy new. The rotating drum is welded together with some old bike wheel rims, a bit of old steel trellis work with chicken wire attached with wire wrapping. The rollers are some old in-line skate wheels sat in some ali U-shaped section. Ideally it could do with another pair of rollers acting on one of the wheels to control the "thrust", and keep prevent the other rollers catching on the rim edge.
I plan of rotavating the entire front and back garden and probably mixing in horse $hit and builders sand as I go. The soil here in this part of Suffolk is very clay-ey and despite living at the top of a hill, the ground saturates quickly.
Can anyone recommend anything else worth adding to the soil while it is being handled?
Nozzle