thallman
Member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2011
- Messages
- 44
- Tractor
- Mahindra 7060 4WD
Check out the 3pt home-built splitter I recently finished and let me know what you think!
Yes. I tried it out before painting it. It's slower than the motor powered or pto pump powered machinces because I'm using the tractors hydraulic pump (which I'm guessing is somewhere around 7-8GMP --average for most tractors). But it's not too slow. I've modified and fixed our farm machinery before but this is the first piece I've made from scratch.
Thanks Ken, for the suggestion. I've seen multiple people do that and considered it if this doesn't end up splitting the way I want to in the long run. The main reason I didn't do that was because I've seen people run a slip-on 4-way splitting wedge that I though was pretty cool. In it's current state, that option still remains![]()
The splitter I made years ago was not the fastest either. I could split wood faster with a double edge axe but not nearly as long, the splitter could go all day.I never felt the need for a really fast wood splitter either. Mine isn't very fast but I can keep up to it for a good long time and I don't feel the need to count my fingers after each stroke:thumbsup:.
I suppose if you usually get a work gang together and do a bunch of splitting in a day speed could be more important but for my one man operation slow and steady works out nicely.
Mine runs at a comfortable pace with the tractor at 17-1800 RPM, the tractor runs nice and smooth at that RPM and doesn't seem too hard on fuel.
I made ours to handle stove size wood and fireplace wood and used a set of bolts for stops for the shorter stove cut wood. Last picture, post #15To make up for the slow cyle time of the cylinder, don't let it retract all the way. I just tap the handle to stop the auto retract when I am splitting peices less than my stroke length:thumbsup: