Most arborists and tree services sharpen their chipper knives too late. By the time the blades are visibly dull, your machine has already been burning excess fuel, producing rough chips, and putting unnecessary strain on the engine and drum bearings.

The question isn't whether to sharpen — it's when. Get that timing right and you'll spend less on fuel, extend blade life, and keep your machine running at peak output every shift.

The Short Answer

Sharpen your chipper knives every 20 to 30 hours of active chipping. That's the standard interval most equipment manufacturers recommend and what experienced operators follow in practice.

In tropical FNQ conditions — where operators deal with high-moisture timber, vine species, and heavy wet-season vegetation loads — you may find yourself at the shorter end of that range. Wet, stringy timber is hard on edges.

Signs Your Blades Are Due

Hours are a guide, not a guarantee. Watch for these signs that your chipper knives need sharpening before you hit the 20-hour mark:

Rule of thumb: If you're not sure whether your blades are sharp, they probably aren't. Sharp chipper knives have a noticeable, immediate effect on machine performance — you'll know the difference the moment you start chipping.

Sharpening Schedule by Usage

Use this as a starting framework and adjust based on the timber species and conditions you work with:

Usage Level Hrs/Week Sharpen Every Approx. Sets/Year
Light (occasional residential work) 5–8 hrs 3–5 weeks 10–15
Moderate (regular commercial contracts) 10–15 hrs 2–3 weeks 20–25
Heavy (full-time, council or large-scale) 20–30 hrs Weekly 40–50+

At $120 per sharpening, a heavy-use operator spending $4,800–$6,000 per year on sharpenings is still dramatically ahead of the cost of replacing worn-out knives or repairing bearings damaged by chronic vibration.

When Blades Are Beyond Sharpening

Not every blade can be saved. Look for these signs that replacement is the better call:

We inspect every blade on receipt. If any blade in your set is beyond sharpening, we'll tell you before we start work — no charge for the assessment.

DIY vs Professional Sharpening

It's worth being direct about this comparison.

Factor Professional Sharpening DIY / Angle Grinder
Edge angle accuracy Factory spec, every time Difficult to maintain consistently
Weight matching Each blade matched in the set Rarely done — causes vibration
Heat damage risk Wet grinder — minimal heat High — angle grinder overheats steel
Time per set Your time: zero (drop off and pick up) 30–60 minutes per set, plus setup
Cost $120 per set Free (but hidden costs in blade life)
Blade longevity Maximised Shortened — improper geometry degrades faster

The critical issue with DIY sharpening isn't just the quality of the edge — it's the weight matching. If one blade in a set is 5 grams lighter than the others after sharpening, your drum is out of balance. Over time, this accelerates bearing wear and causes vibration that spreads through the frame. Professional sharpening accounts for this. A quick grind at home doesn't.

The real cost of dull blades: An operator running 15 hours per week on dull knives for an extra 2 weeks (to "get one more run" out of a set) is looking at roughly 10–15% higher fuel consumption across those hours. On a modern diesel chipper, that's not a small number. Sharpen on schedule.

Why Local Matters in FNQ

The only alternative to local sharpening in Cairns and Far North Queensland has historically been freight to Brisbane — a round-trip that takes 10 to 14 days, costs $30–$60 in freight alone, and means your machine sits idle while the blades travel south and back.

If you're running a chipper on commercial contracts or council work, two weeks of downtime waiting for a Brisbane return isn't a minor inconvenience — it can cost jobs or force you to push through with dull blades, which compounds the damage.

Local sharpening changes the economics. When the turnaround is 1–2 days instead of two weeks, you can sharpen on schedule, every time, without disrupting your operation.

Sharp Blades — Fast Turnaround

Most jobs completed next business day. Drop off in Cairns or we collect for $20. Open Monday to Saturday from 5:00am.

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The Bottom Line

Sharpen your chipper knives every 20–30 hours of chipping. Watch for increased fuel use, rough chips and machine vibration as leading indicators. Don't wait until the blades are obviously dull — by then you've already paid in fuel and wear.

For arborists and tree services operating in Cairns and FNQ, Steady Eco offers fast local chipper knife sharpening — most jobs next business day — with collection and return available. No Brisbane freight, no weeks of downtime.

Send us a message or get a quote online to book a time.