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Thread: Who is cutting wood?

  1. #1276
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nobody Famous View Post
    Deeper meaning in what I posted, I'd be cautious on bringing this wood into any indoor space on account of rot, pests, bugs, insects. If using for outdoor fire pit I'd have no hesitation storing (outdoors) and using.
    I see whatcha mean. This is how we roll. That oak needs another year (or more) before we burn it. Used for indoor heating.

  2. #1277
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    After everything else is has been politicized It had to happen ... the politicization of wood cutting
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  3. #1278
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    Does anybody have a recommended updated version (?) of max Weber? His writing always put me to sleep.

  4. #1279
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    defensible spacing beetle kill up at the ski hut
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  5. #1280
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    What’s the over-under on electric splitters?

  6. #1281
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    Quote Originally Posted by whipski View Post
    defensible spacing beetle kill up at the ski hut
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    I love the cloud in the photo... and the water tank

  7. #1282
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    Quote Originally Posted by bodywhomper View Post
    What’s the over-under on electric splitters?
    I’ve got a 120v plug in hydraulic splitter which was given to me basically brand new. I have to say that It is slow compared to a big gas powered unit. I think it might be a five ton splitter(?). Maybe 2 ton? I can’t remember. It’s as small as you can get I’d say. In using it, it’s on par with manually splitting wood, time wise. You don’t spend time bending over and resetting wood to be split. And it saves elbow strain. A few years ago I had my three year old running the controls, while I loaded the logs. Did I mention it was slow😀? All in all, it’s been a great machine. Commercially it
    Wouldn’t fly, but it’s fine for home use. You just gotta hand in your man card before using it

  8. #1283
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    I've been paying local ski patrollers to buck up my wood. Been getting 10 cord semi loads delivered. The upside of beetle kill I guess. Trying to avoid exhaust and noise. I enjoy running the splitter tho.

  9. #1284
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    Quote Originally Posted by whipski View Post
    I've been paying local ski patrollers to buck up my wood. Been getting 10 cord semi loads delivered. The upside of beetle kill I guess. Trying to avoid exhaust and noise. I enjoy running the splitter tho.
    Just curious how much are they are charge for a semi load. I called a guy that delivers around here. This year he is charging $2k for a load that will be around 16-18 cord. He's gone up a little bit since the last time we had a delivery.

    The windstorm took out some big tree at a friends cabin this week, so I will get a a truck load or two for helping clean up. They can't burn the lodge pole because his mother is allergic to it - never heard that before. It'll be perfect for next year.

  10. #1285
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    Quote Originally Posted by bodywhomper View Post
    What’s the over-under on electric splitters?
    if you need gas you need gas but most people don't need gas powered because they can are splitting at home close to 115V, Its basically an electric motor running the hydralic pump intsead of a gas engine on wheels and all the yada that entails so electric are smaller to store or transport, less $$$ to buy, no maintenace, no fuel

    Its possible to jam a piece of fire wood up against the safety button and let the hydralic pump run continuously makes it a little faster, the small home use the gas powered i used wasn't really much faster cuz you still gotta wait for the bed to reset every time just like an electric

    i would put an electric up on a bench so the bed is at waist height and screw it to something solid in your wood shed so you don't have to bend over, maybe have the wood split & stay on the bench, that way you pick a round up once split it, put the split wood in the stack without bending over

    for home use the bigger electrics are 6 ton the smaller are 2 1/2 ton, around here they usually go on sale in summer for about 4-500 CAN$ ,

    a gas powered is is more like 1500 $
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  11. #1286
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    Who is cutting wood?

    6 ton splitter is next to worthless in anything hard, sizeable or with knots. $1500 gas splitter is 24-30 ton and will go thru almost anything like butter.

  12. #1287
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    I hope no one in the extreme fire danger zones are cutting wood right now.

  13. #1288
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sharon Needles View Post
    6 ton splitter is next to worthless in anything hard, sizeable or with knots. $1500 gas splitter is 24-30 ton and will go thru almost anything like butter.
    ever actualy use both ? Most of the stuff around here was smaller but IME the 6 ton was going thru 18-24" rounds with knots but but you could just take another go at it
    Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know

  14. #1289
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    I've said it before here. I'm pretty happy with this little 5ton 120v. It's slow but splits decent rounds for around here. I'm almost only running pine and fir through it. It's slow and I can hand split just as fast if not faster but way easier on the back. I have a covered back patio and whatever didnt get split before winter will get split under the patio with hot coffee and weed. I can just wheel a gorilla cart full of rounds next to a comfy chair and go to town. I bought it because we bought our place midwinter and needed something my wife could use easy. Figured if it lasted one season I'd be happy and have been pleasantly surprised how well it works for a couple hundred bucks.Click image for larger version. 

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    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using TGR Forums mobile app

  15. #1290
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    Fallen tree(s) keeping me in fire pit wood for a while.
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  16. #1291
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    Quote Originally Posted by lifelinksplit View Post
    I've said it before here. I'm pretty happy with this little 5ton 120v. It's slow but splits decent rounds for around here. I'm almost only running pine and fir through it. It's slow and I can hand split just as fast if not faster but way easier on the back. I have a covered back patio and whatever didnt get split before winter will get split under the patio with hot coffee and weed. I can just wheel a gorilla cart full of rounds next to a comfy chair and go to town. I bought it because we bought our place midwinter and needed something my wife could use easy. Figured if it lasted one season I'd be happy and have been pleasantly surprised how well it works for a couple hundred bucks.Click image for larger version. 

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    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using TGR Forums mobile app
    This is about what mine looks like also. It’s slow, but it’s also manageable. I do like XXXer’s idea of putting it on a table or higher mount

  17. #1292
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    Who is cutting wood?

    Quote Originally Posted by XXX-er View Post
    ever actualy use both ? Most of the stuff around here was smaller but IME the 6 ton was going thru 18-24" rounds with knots but but you could just take another go at it
    We struggled bad with some green oak. I do think they have a place and have strongly considered getting one.

    My setup would be stacking rounds in a shop/garage and splitting as needed. It would free up some precious dry weather time for other chores.

  18. #1293
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    It doesn't count as firewood until it's split, stacked and top covered for at least 2 full summers, preferably 3.

    Get yourself on the three year plan and don't look back. You're welcome.

  19. #1294
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    Who is cutting wood?

    Is the tonnage rating equal between electric and gas splitters?

    I split a bunch by hand but for the past 3 years, I have rented a 34 ton gas splitter for a day or two @ $90/day. I find blue oak takes a lot of time to split by hand, whether green or seasoned (I have a moisture meter). Some of my oak is well north of 24” diameter. Most of my pine is over 24” and I have one felled pine tree on the ground (background of my recent photo) that was over 50” at the butt (I’ll have to noodle that thing to be able to move it.
    Last edited by bodywhomper; 09-10-2020 at 07:58 PM.

  20. #1295
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    Quote Originally Posted by glademaster View Post
    It doesn't count as firewood until it's split, stacked and top covered for at least 2 full summers, preferably 3.

    Get yourself on the three year plan and don't look back. You're welcome.
    Three year plan? I’m fucked then. I just burned the last few rounds I had in the last few days since it snowed here in Colorado. I’ve never gotten a year ahead, much less three. I just go get my two cords of pine/spruce a year and split it. It’s usually standing dead though, and seldom wider than 16”

  21. #1296
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    Standing dead comfier is ready to burn as is

  22. #1297
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sharon Needles View Post
    Standing dead comfier is ready to burn as is
    Ya think? If there is standing dead everywhere, who cuts green wood and stacks it for three years to dry? Unless that’s what you have. I have shitty dry pines, so that’s what I burn. Elsewhere, people have oak, apple, and other quality woods to burn. I’d stack and dry that type of wood if I had it around

  23. #1298
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jethro View Post
    Ya think? If there is standing dead everywhere, who cuts green wood and stacks it for three years to dry? Unless that’s what you have. I have shitty dry pines, so that’s what I burn. Elsewhere, people have oak, apple, and other quality woods to burn. I’d stack and dry that type of wood if I had it around
    I’m a burn whatcha got kinda guy, too.

  24. #1299
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    Smoke em if ya got em!

  25. #1300
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    Quote Originally Posted by glademaster View Post
    It doesn't count as firewood until it's split, stacked and top covered for at least 2 full summers, preferably 3.

    Get yourself on the three year plan and don't look back. You're welcome.
    Lemme grab my time machine. I guess Washington is super wet and needs more time to season...

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