First, a couple pictures of my chicken run compost experiment:
Here you can get an good idea of how deep my chicken run compost litter. I put an 18 inch high board at the gate to keep the litter from blocking the door. The litter is actually a little higher than 18 inches in some places, and down to about 12 inches in others where the chickens have dug holes.
I don't imagine you can see, but the chicken run is loaded with wood chips, leaves, and grass clippings. Whenever we have kitchen scraps, I just throw it into the run for the chickens to eat, or scratch into the litter. I used to just put kitchen scraps in the pallet compost bin I put in the chicken run, but now the whole chicken run is essentially a compost system.
It might not look like the most ascetically pleasing chicken run, but it never smells, never gets muddy, and I'm making lots of compost for the gardens.
As to my cement mixer converted to a compost sifter....
Here is the sifter in action. You can see I took a normal cement mixer and attached a barrel to sift the cement. I had an old plastic half barrel which I cut in half again, using the bottom of the plastic barrel to attach to the cement mixer, added some wire for the sifting, and used the upper part of the plastic barrel to make a ring to keep the wire from getting out of shape.
I have one dump cart under the sifter to catch the sifted compost (using 1/4 inch hardware cloth), and the other cart is collecting the larger wood chips that are not yet composted. I am throwing those larger wood chips into the chicken run to mix with the litter. It helps to balance out all the grass clippings I have been dumping into the run.
Here is a closeup of how I attached the sifting barrel to the cement mixer. The turnbuckles can be taken off to remove the sifter and you can use the cement mixer as a cement mixer.
Here is a closeup of the finished compost I get after sifting it through the 1/4 inch hardware cloth. This is only compost from a pile of arborist wood chips (includes bark, leaves, etc...) and not from my chicken run. I have not yet tried to sift any compost from my chicken run.
Here is a shot of the wood chips too large for the sifting. They work themselves out of the sifting barrel and fall into the second cart. I am dumping them into the chicken run, but you could also just throw them back on a compost pile and let them age some more.
The first day it took about 20 minutes for me to shift 6 cubic feet of finished compost using this cement mixer compost sifter. Using my old manual sifter made from 2x4's and hardware cloth would have taken me hours. This is so much easier.
It rained last night, and today I sifted some of the wood chips. Being "damp", I found the wood chip compost was sticking to the 1/4 inch hardware cloth and I had to smack the wire every once in a while to clear it so it would sift. So, today, that 20 minute job took me about 30 minutes to get a full cart of finished compost. Even so, for me, that is well worth it.