Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy?

/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #11  
Poplar would be very ideal for what you are wanting to do. I can't answer on the future growth vs. cut now question you asked but I had a guy come mill some poplar for me and I built my shop 2 years ago with it and it was great. Cut easily, soft enough to drive a nail in yet stronger than pine. To build a loft with it is a great lumber. I am not crazy about the look of poplar finished and made into household things, the wood color just doesn't tickle my fancy so I framed with it.

I also had him cut a bunch of Oak and Ash. Ash was also great to work with but good luck driving a nail in it, made for some strong walls.
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #12  
Poplar would be very ideal for what you are wanting to do. I can't answer on the future growth vs. cut now question you asked but I had a guy come mill some poplar for me and I built my shop 2 years ago with it and it was great. Cut easily, soft enough to drive a nail in yet stronger than pine. To build a loft with it is a great lumber. I am not crazy about the look of poplar finished and made into household things, the wood color just doesn't tickle my fancy so I framed with it.

I also had him cut a bunch of Oak and Ash. Ash was also great to work with but good luck driving a nail in it, made for some strong walls.

I WOULD JUST CUTT THE POPLAR WOOD IF ITS DRY STANDING TIMBER THEN NO WAITING FOR IT TO DRY AN NO STORAGE SPACE WASTED IF ITS UNDER 12'' CUTT IT IF OVER 12'' IF GREEN LEAVE THEM STAND THEN LATER DOWN ROAD SELL THEM WAIT TILL THEY REACH 16'' IN DIAMETER TO DO SO ITS NOT WORTH BUYING THE LUMBER I BEEN AROUND WOOD PROCESSING OF ALL TYPES 25 YRS
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #13  
Yep, he offered. He has more equipment than he knows what to do with and likes to use it. I've had him do stuff for me in the past and he's been pretty reasonable on price. Haven't gotten into specifics yet. He was sawing fence posts for $1 per post for another guy.
Send him my way ....

I just figured out that in addition to the poplar we have growing on the property, what I thought were "junk trees", are actually black locust .... I think I just found the lumber to replace the piece of **** PT lumber deck we have ....

BTW, I'm in a similar situation - coming down the home stretch on finishing up the polebarn have a bunch of poplar I could mill or have milled for dimensional lumber for inside the barn ....

I believe the valuable trees to be far enough apart that I won't cause damage and I'm not worried about the honey locust trees.
The honey locust might be the more valuable of the two .... check it out ;)
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy?
  • Thread Starter
#14  
rswyan said:
The honey locust might be the more valuable of the two .... check it out ;)

There are three types of locust. Yellow locust, black locust, and honey locust. Yellow and black make excellent fence posts and will last 30 years. Once they season, they get hard as concrete. Honey locust isn't good for anything as far as I know. It rots really fast, but the worst part about them is the thorns. I've learned painful lessons to leave something alone that will grow 6 inch long thorns in clusters all along the trunk..
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy?
  • Thread Starter
#15  
rswyan said:
The honey locust might be the more valuable of the two .... check it out ;)

There are three types of locust. Yellow locust, black locust, and honey locust. Yellow and black make excellent fence posts and will last 30 years. Once they season, they get hard as concrete. Honey locust isn't good for anything as far as I know. It rots really fast, but the worst part about them is the thorns. I've learned painful lessons to leave something alone that will grow 6 inch long thorns in clusters all along the trunk..
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #16  
I love working with Poplar. One of the easiest of the hardwoods to work with. Not sure if it is the minerals in the ground in E./SE Ohio that gives it the variable colors to the wood or what, but love the way it looks. Here are some stall doors I built last summer for my new horsebarn out of some of it.


DSC00214.jpg
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy?
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Very nice. I like those. Mine won't be as fancy, but I hope to do something similar for my goats.
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
I WOULD JUST CUTT THE POPLAR WOOD IF ITS DRY STANDING TIMBER THEN NO WAITING FOR IT TO DRY AN NO STORAGE SPACE WASTED IF ITS UNDER 12'' CUTT IT IF OVER 12'' IF GREEN LEAVE THEM STAND THEN LATER DOWN ROAD SELL THEM WAIT TILL THEY REACH 16'' IN DIAMETER TO DO SO ITS NOT WORTH BUYING THE LUMBER I BEEN AROUND WOOD PROCESSING OF ALL TYPES 25 YRS


Thanks. I believe that I will have enough over 16" diamater to finish up what I want to do. It's just nice to have a few guidelines so I don't do something not too smart.
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #19  
Thanks... Here is another picture of the inside of one of the stalls. More Poplar, planed to 7/8", ship lapped, and screwed to walls. I put two coats of Thompson's waterseal on it, for a finish. Did this in my present barn almost 12 years ago, and holding up real well.
DSC00169.jpg
 
/ Portable Sawmill Lumber or buy? #20  
There are three types of locust. Yellow locust, black locust, and honey locust.
Really ?

I think you are confused - black locust is sometimes (commonly) referred to as "yellow locust" ....

AFAIK, there is no separate and unique genus and species recognized as "yellow locust" ....

And I believe that both black locust and honey locust leaves can, and do, turn yellow under certain circumstances.

Yellow and black make excellent fence posts and will last 30 years. Once they season, they get hard as concrete. Honey locust isn't good for anything as far as I know. It rots really fast, but the worst part about them is the thorns.
Like I said, you may want to check into it ....

Scope out this paper from the US Department of Agriculture, US Forest Service for starters:

Gleditsia triacanthos

Part of the reference sourcing for the uses of honey locust for that paper come from the American Forestry Association.

From the above publication:

"Honey-locust wood is dense, hard, coarse-grained, strong, stiff, shock-resistant, takes a high polish, and is durable in contact with soil [11,14,16,22,42]. Honey-locust wood is used locally for posts, pallets, crates, general construction, furniture, interior finish, turnery, and firewood [8,36]. It is useful, but is too scarce to be of economic importance [8]."

I've learned painful lessons to leave something alone that will grow 6 inch long thorns in clusters all along the trunk..
Understandable .... but I promise that reading about it won't hurt .... :thumbsup:
 

Marketplace Items

2016 Volkswagen Tiguan SUV (A59231)
2016 Volkswagen...
Snap-On Zeus Diagnostic Machine (A61307)
Snap-On Zeus...
GRID SHAPED BUCKET FOR MINI EXCAVATOR (A58214)
GRID SHAPED BUCKET...
2019 TerraGator 7300 Spinner truck (A61307)
2019 TerraGator...
2020 DRAGON 150BBL ALUMINUM (A58214)
2020 DRAGON 150BBL...
2006 TerraGator 8104 (A61307)
2006 TerraGator...
 
Top