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This is a review of my Krendl 500. I love this machine, and I paid about $7,000 after doing a bit of shopping around.
I primarily retrofit old houses with dense packed cellulose insulation in plaster walls. If you are dense packing into newer homes with 1/2 inch drywall make sure you play around with your blower speed and material feed settings or you'll start popping the drywall off the walls. This machine is also great for open blowing attics, wet cellulose spraying and packing behind insulweb and other insulation netting before the finished surface.
If you want a heavy duty machine that can really blow the insulation I think you'll appreciate this machine. I have the double blower with single input 240 volt - 30 amp cord. If you are working on a house without a 240 volt dryer outlet you'll need to add one or run a generator. If you run a generator make sure it can consistently provide 230+ volts, or you'll damage your new Krendl insulation blower.
We use the Krendl 500 insulation blower machine also, but we don't mess with the dryer/range hook ups. We bought the 8,000W Rigid generator from Home Depot for $1,300 and it does a great job. Keeps steady voltage at 230 + and its not too loud.
After dealing with long extension cords, 4 different conversion plugs (30 amp dryer - 3 and 4 prong, 50 amp range - 3 and 4 prong) and a few home owners that refused to let me tap into their circuit/fuse panel we purchased a generator also. It was a wise investment and has saved us a ton of time. We can now park our insulation trailer anywhere and the krendl insulation blower never has to leave the trailer.