Tractors and wood! Show your pics

   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,131  
I have an out door boiler burn all year long. That's an American splitter pretty nice with log lift will lift a few hundred pounds before it will lift the unit off the ground. It's nice hauling with the tractor and the dump trailer and with the tail gate down just under the work table makes a huge work table. And if anyone wants a capable compact tractor the Kubota l45/47 is the money
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,132  
IMG_20210919_120717371.jpg
had to cut that in half that's a big piece
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,134  
Does your unit split vertically?
I would bet the answer is no. The splitter has a stationary wedge and the anvil is on the end of the cylinder. If it were turned vertical, there would be no where for the log to go when pushed through the wedge: the log would hit the ground.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,135  
With that nice hydraulic lift, he really doesn't need it to turn vertical.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,136  
Deleted. (Duplicate)
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,137  
With that nice hydraulic lift, he really doesn't need it to turn vertical.
Was thinking about the bigger round that he had to cut in half . . . we split some very big rounds, but those have to be done vertically. :)
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,138  
Was thinking about the bigger round that he had to cut in half . . . we split some very big rounds, but those have to be done vertically. :)
Ask the local shovel operator to split them with the grapples or heel rack.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,139  
With that nice hydraulic lift, he really doesn't need it to turn vertical.

Was thinking about the bigger round that he had to cut in half . . . we split some very big rounds, but those have to be done vertically. :)

I have a hydraulic lift on my splitter. I've come to the conclusion over the years that anything too big for my lift to handle just isn't worth the effort to turn in to firewood for me (in fact, as I've gotten older, I'm passing on some logs that are within the size/weight limits of my splitter.) I reached a similar conclusion when I had a splitter that would go vertical: beyond a certain size, it just wasn't worth the effort.
I'm sure my decision is influenced by the abundance of good firewood hardwoods available on my property. If I were desperate for firewood, I'd put the work into what I now leave to rot.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #21,140  
Right now, most of my firewood comes from log ends off last year's harvest operations. After slashing hardwood logs, there is an abundance of firewood left around. If they're too big to lift after cutting them stove length, they stay right where they are. I'm letting the wood on my own lot grow for when I retire, and don't have that option.

I forgot my chaps today, so wrestled some big chunks of ash into the truck. For a while afterwards my back hated me for it… next time I will come home empty
 
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