Fruit season has come to an end and my truck is still broke but in a position that is out of my hands.

I'm desperately trying to accept what I cannot change and be patient and not get angry or depressed over that whole deal so I am trying to concentrate on other things that I need or want to do. Of course as usual most of my free time is at work so that's where my mind starts to wander. I don't like to let my mind wander because it is too little to be out on it's own and often gets lost causing me to waste a lot of time looking for it, so I need to keep it occupied with various projects. One thing I am considering is buying some 4" sight glass tubes from Still Dragon and rebuilding the Muggles into a normal flute but I am actually very happy with the way the Muggles already works so don't really want to change anything. Since I have a couple plates left over from the Muggles Too build I'm considering making a single plate Mini Muggles just to play around with. I want to modify the apple press to handle more apples in a pressing but that is just a matter of re-cutting the vertical parts and drilling a few holes so that is a job for home, not work. All of those things are also subjects for different threads, not this one.
What is a subject for this thread is my apple chopper. I have now successfully run the apple chopper through an entire season, processing between 1,100 and 1,200 LBS of apples plus some pears with only a single set of broken blades as an issue. Now that apple season is over I am starting to think of the things I might like to improve on it. In truth I am quite happy with the chopper and I'm pretty confident it can handle as much as 500 LBS an hour but I have been thinking "Can I get it up 1,000 LBS an hour?"
Then I had to ask myself "Self", I asked, "Do we really need to chop 1,000 LBS of apples per hour?"
Myself says to me "Me", Myself says, "it isn't a matter of need it is a matter of can."
"But the press can't handle 1,000 LBS an hour"
"That's beside the point, besides, you are going to make it handle probably 200-300 LBS in a single pressing, maybe more, that's only 3-5 press loads to reach 1,000 LBS, certainly you can handle that in a day? You also like to let it rest after chopping and before pressing anyway."
Well I certainly couldn't argue with that logic so I started thinking about exactly what I wanted to accomplish.
First was to see if I could make it even cheaper to build. I'm happy with the fineness of the pulp so I want to keep it at least that fine.
Second, I think the biggest thing slowing me down is the 1/3HP motor. If I feed apples in too fast it causes the motor to bog down so that I have to feed them in at a somewhat slow rate, not that one or two minutes per bucket is really that slow. In truth what slows me down the most is changing catch buckets and reloading the hopper/chute.
That brings me to #3, The chute can only handle 1.5-2 buckets of apples, so it has to be reloaded every couple minutes. A taller hopper to hold more apples is definitely on the list.
#D, The last thing on the list is the barrel/drum, I would like it to be slightly larger so the opening to feed the apples in can handle the larger apples a bit better. Right now the opening can just barely fit the largest apples, they actually have to be forced to get them through. That's not really a big deal but I like to just roll them down the chute and watch them fall in.
So now I have the want list made up, I started thinking about blades. As luck would have it I found some scrap pieces of thick aluminum sheet. Ideally I would make the blades out of stainless steel but I don't have any, well maybe I do somewhere but what I have is soft SS and I need hard to make blades out of and the aluminum is free, so the aluminum will have to do for now.
So I figured I would make the blades to fit a 10" barrel, since I plan on making it out of SS ducting if I can find some, my alternate plan is to make it out of a SS trash can. As luck has it Home Depot is going to have a SS trash can set on sale for $20 on Black Friday. I think this may give me exactly what I need, although from what I've seen they run about 12" diameter so I may have to make new longer blades. Anyway, I cut, sharpened and serrated 17 blades the other day, I plan on making more as I can but really 17 is probably enough.
I'm considering how to stack and space them now. I think I may need 21 to stack them how I want but I can come up with more metal if I need to.
For mounting the blades, I plan on buying a 1/2" piece of SS all thread rod and some nuts, The plan currently is to have a piece of PVC on the bottom sticking through the bearing, then a nut, a set of blades, I'm considering as many as 3 on the bottom set, maybe even the bottom 3 sets then 2 for a few more sets, then single blades after that. Each set will have a nut between them to create space between the blades and hopefully hold them to keep them from spinning. Then perhaps another piece of PVC held in place by nuts, to help keep the threads clean, then once again connect to the motor using a piece of hydraulic hose.
To keep the motor from bogging down, I'm thinking about the air compressor I found on the side of the road a while back. The pump itself is shot but the motor is a two or three HP motor and should be able to chop through anything without bogging down, if I can somehow manage to keep the blades from loosening up and freewheeling.
That's about it for the thoughts on my newest redesign of the apple chopper. As I think about it now, I won't even be using any of the parts off the existing one so if this works at only 500 LBS per hour, I can run it along side of the other one and get 1,000 LBS per hour
Then I need to think about getting an air actuated jack to make pressing even easier.