User Manual

Table Of Contents
0478 201 8315 B - EN
14
7.6 Mounting the cable clip
Press electric cable (1) into the
designated recesses in cable clip (2) as
shown.
8.1 What material can be processed?
Organic plant trimmings such as fruit and
vegetable cuttings, flower cuttings, leaves,
tree and hedge cuttings, as well as thick
branches with side shoots and twigs.
8.2 What material cannot be
processed?
Stones, glass, bits of metal (wire, nails,
etc.) or plastic must not be fed into the
garden shredder.
As a general rule:
Any materials that do not belong on the
compost heap should not be processed
using the garden shredder.
8.3 Maximum branch diameter
The data relates to freshly cut branch
material:
Maximum branch diameter:
35 mm
8.4 Working area for operator
For safety reasons, the operator must
stay within the working area (grey
area X) for the entire operating period
(while the motor is switched on or the
engine is running), particularly in order
to prevent injuries due to shredding
material that is ejected backwards.
8.5 Correct machine load
The load on the motor or engine of the
garden shredder must never cause the
speed to drop significantly. Always feed
the garden shredder continuously and
steadily. If the speed drops when working
with the garden shredder, stop feeding the
machine in order to relieve the load on the
motor or engine.
8.6 Overload protection
If an overload of the motor occurs during
operation, the built-in overload protection
device automatically switches off the
motor.
The garden shredder can be started up
again after a cooling period of
approx. 10 minutes. Frequent triggering
of the overload protection may be
attributable to the following causes:
Unsuitable electric cable (Ö 10.1)
Power overload
Machine overloaded due to excessive
quantities of shredding material or blunt
blades
8. Notes on working with the
machine
Tree and hedge cuttings should be
processed when fresh, as the
shredding performance is better
with fresh than with dried-out or wet
material.