I was at the local dump recycle shop when I walked past this yellow machine and almost gave myself whiplash as I did a double take: It's called a "Forestwest grout mixer" and looks identical to a small green sand muller minus the wheels to break up the lumps. I bought it for $50 Australian or about $30 US. Interestingly the inside may be a bit rusty, but the machine shows no sign of ever having been used as the paint on the center column is intact as well as the corners of the barrel where the grout would scour the paint off immediately. It may have been damaged stock that spent some time out in the rain to get rusty. The power cord was cut off so maybe a motor fault like a dead capacitor. The top cover was bent but pushing on the bent part immediately fixed it and allowed the lid to close properly and activate the lid safety switch, so that may have been the problem. I'll see if I can see any faults and give it a run. It's the 80 litre model: https://forestwest.com.au/products/80l-portable-mortar-mixer-screed-mixer
The forum has been dead for me 11 days just after I made the initial post. At this stage I haven't done anything, I have noticed the cord was cut off the motor and it looks like the lid safety switch mechanism was removed. I'll make sure the motor works and might even try it as-is before modifying it with a wheel to make it into a proper muller. The weather has been non stop raining lately so I haven't done much at all,
Same here, I've only been able to get the page to load today. Even if the motor needs work; it looks like a good score.
I once got a Craftsman table saw used for very little money at a secondhand-junk-antique store that the motor did not work. One or two loose wires in either the motor or switchbox, once corrected has been running for almost 30 years. If it runs like the video it would be a solid unit.
I'll have to test the motor soon and see if the planetary gearbox is ok, hopefully it's a dead capacitor or something. I don't think I've seen something so close to being a muller without actually being one, the retail new price is expensive compared to a concrete mixer but I guess in the right trade, specialist machines pay for themselves quickly.
A little small, but this machine for mixing chocolate also deserves to be nominated for this year's Such a Muller Yet Not a Muller Awards (SaMYNaMA's) I wonder if my petrobond would be as smooth and creamy if I mulled it for 48 hours? Jeff
Only if you add some mayonnaise to the petrobond . Looks to be a decent home capacity and in stainless steel too.