Hi all.
I've been trying to get my dry blower dialled in but am having trouble with the inlet hose/connection to the box.
It seems like no matter how I position the hose, it ends up holding weight from the box and causing it to lose some vibration.... and unless it isn't moved (which is kinda hard as im always kicking it etc while I'm working) I cant get the material to flow over the riffles evenly.
I'm not losing very much, maybe a few specks to an hour run, but in the more clay dense mullock piles I am losing more for sure.
I dig a trench for the hose under the box but doesn't seem to help much.
Watched the "I Brake for Bedrock" guys and the way they set up but mine never seems to run like theirs.
Was thinking about putting a 90 degree elbow on the inlet but I think this might shift more weight to one side of the box unless I ran it out the back which Isn't great cause of the tailings obv.
Any pro's out there with some tips?
I've been trying to get my dry blower dialled in but am having trouble with the inlet hose/connection to the box.
It seems like no matter how I position the hose, it ends up holding weight from the box and causing it to lose some vibration.... and unless it isn't moved (which is kinda hard as im always kicking it etc while I'm working) I cant get the material to flow over the riffles evenly.
I'm not losing very much, maybe a few specks to an hour run, but in the more clay dense mullock piles I am losing more for sure.
I dig a trench for the hose under the box but doesn't seem to help much.
Watched the "I Brake for Bedrock" guys and the way they set up but mine never seems to run like theirs.
Was thinking about putting a 90 degree elbow on the inlet but I think this might shift more weight to one side of the box unless I ran it out the back which Isn't great cause of the tailings obv.
Any pro's out there with some tips?