really?? Thought that was the a dying breed of men... I love the carpet, a friend of mines long long long time ago, had the Jenny that would collaspe down and he could put it away. Was the coolest thing I ever seen and since I couldn't get one like it never did. I like free range conditioning and I love the Carpet mill... Did get to see a dog run on the Gambler mills and those mills are a thing of beauty and worth their grain in salt.. But back to the Jenny he had a very interesting way of shaping a hound on a Jenny and it was genius and he got some great work out of it even some strength & drive work.
Try an find Mike George if he's still around. Had mine for year's with out any problems. Then he was in N.C.
Do to time constraints looks like we are gonna go with a mill from ghost rider anyone have any feedback on these mills??
Nut, I didn't accuse you of yelling anything. I'm simply telling you what I know to be facts from working dogs, for years, by my vehicle. I never saw a dog sprint, full or otherwise, at 20 mph. That's running on the ground with nothing holding them or them pulling anything around.
Not a lot of dogs go all out on a mill. Even when they are really spinning the mill look at their body composition. It is like their body is still and the legs are like pendulums swinging back and forth. The mill is turning, the dog is working and this can serve a purpose so I am not knocking the slat mil.
Then watch a dog on the ground sprinting. He lowers his body, his front legs reach out and literally grab the ground in front of him. The back legs dig in and pretty much pushes the ground away from him propelling himself forward. A dog sprinting on the ground is the better choice for me.
With that said one may see slightly faster speeds on a mill where the dog is not propelling his total body weight forward because the belt is moving from under him unlike the ground being stationary. A dog in an all out ground spring may see 14-15-16mph over short distances and maybe 16-17mph on a nice free turning mill. I have never seen a dog get to the 20mph mark, not a bulldog anyway. Although I guess it is possible for a bulldog to go 20 I just have never seen it. I am not sure I would ever be concerned with attained speed as much as would be with sustained speed.
I would like to see one on a mill hit the 20mph. It would be interesting to see. EWO
Just spoke to HF MILLS, they been clocking dogs at 22 mph on their mills. So do the math
I think the math needs to be done as well. Take the speedometer on your car. From the factory it should be accurate. Change your tire size and your speedometer goes up or down based on which way you went with the tires. Same with the mills. I would like to know the speedometers are calibrated to the size of the wheels being used. 22MPH seems like a stretch to me. I could be wrong though. EWO
I've asked him to upload some video's on youtube. Not promoting or bashing any mill. My experience is the dog trotter was not free spinning enough ( for my wishes)