Tree Machine
Addicted to ArboristSite
I totally get you. Call us tinkerers, fabricators, innovators or inventors. We like to dissect things and put them back together. We're unable to get a new piece of gear without thinking, "How can I modify or improve it?"
Some call it a talent, some would consider it more an illness.
But the BigShot is different. First, the shot above, under the wires, over the 2-story house, avoid the copper, nail the highest crotch at 70 feet, this kind of 'throw' is not possible without a great deal of flat-out luck, the trajectory needs to be pretty much a shallowly arced straight line. But with a BigShot, this one was kids play. It wqas a challenging shot and I rated it a par three, but sank it in one. I can now pull a rope and move on to my work. That BigShot may have just paid for itself with it's magnificent ability.
There's not a real abundance of inexpensive arbo tools that do what they're supposed to, time after time after time, increasing your efficiency or abilities and income. For $60, all I can see is a slam dunk.
Personally, I embrace any ideas about improving something.
At the same time, I can take a hard-toothed garden rake and bend over the metal parts, attach pouching and tube and I have a slingshot. Yep, there is that choice. If I was saving any money at all, or making a better product, I just can't see any other reason for reinventing something that's already been done (and done very well).
Some call it a talent, some would consider it more an illness.
But the BigShot is different. First, the shot above, under the wires, over the 2-story house, avoid the copper, nail the highest crotch at 70 feet, this kind of 'throw' is not possible without a great deal of flat-out luck, the trajectory needs to be pretty much a shallowly arced straight line. But with a BigShot, this one was kids play. It wqas a challenging shot and I rated it a par three, but sank it in one. I can now pull a rope and move on to my work. That BigShot may have just paid for itself with it's magnificent ability.
There's not a real abundance of inexpensive arbo tools that do what they're supposed to, time after time after time, increasing your efficiency or abilities and income. For $60, all I can see is a slam dunk.
All I can see is a lawsuit. That would be called patent infringement. One may want to look at what that looks like before one would go that direction, but I have no authority on how you conduct business within the tree climbing community.the madd1 said:Or if you want take one apart make it better and then sell it on arboristsite.com.
Personally, I embrace any ideas about improving something.
At the same time, I can take a hard-toothed garden rake and bend over the metal parts, attach pouching and tube and I have a slingshot. Yep, there is that choice. If I was saving any money at all, or making a better product, I just can't see any other reason for reinventing something that's already been done (and done very well).