My dad's grinder is an old Hobart #32 that he bought new in 1969. The tin plated head alone ways more than my entire 1-1/2hp grinder. It's motor is a 2 man lift. When I was in HS, he made a small dolly for it so that he could just wheel it around on the garage floor. Even though my modern grinder is a little heavy, its a kids toy by comparison. Oh, and it would be really easy to feed your entire arm through the feed throat on that old Hobart. Dad made it VERY clear from a very early age that we do NOT reach down into the feed throat....I have used Cabelas largest, #32 and also Bass Pro’s which I believe is a LEM. The Cabelas grinds better. Even though BP owns Cabelas hopefully they continue to sale the actual Cabelas model. Bigger is better, but consider the weight and setting it up. Bigger is also much heavier. If you are young it doesn’t matter. If old, it starts to matter. Food for thought.
Well if you’ve never used one then you don’t really know. I have two dual grind LEM’s, an #8 and a #22. You cube your meat and fat, mix it up evenly in a lugger/luggers then grind. It all comes out great mixed perfectly fine all in one shot. I do the same making sausage, adding the seasoning in with the cubed meat and fat. Mix the meat, fat, seasoning, water until the seasoning starts to gel a bit then grind. Done in one shot. Processed 120 lbs of elk burger Monday through the #22 and as usual it came out perfectI looked at the double grind heads, but I don't see the benefit. One of the reasons I double grind is to get a more consistent fat distribution between the various tubs of meat that I'm working out of. The double grind head doesn't do that.
