Never again

   / Never again #42  
Instead of rounds you can call them cookies. :)
Cookies are short rounds.

1759793901115.png
 
   / Never again #43  
I used to log professionally.
I wouldn’t think of cutting with anything but sharp.
I find noodling a giant pain.
What works better is to index the round on the edges with a chainsaw cut to hold a wedge. Make the cuts across from each other and insert the wedges then pound away.
Much faster than noodling.
I was just too stubborn today.
If I got this new fangled splitter designed to wack a round vertically, then by golly, that what it had to do
Also, my chainsaw is too small for this work. I could have used my 272 that was stolen years ago.
Been there. Sharp chain, check. Noodling a pain, takes forever. Stubborn, check. New splitter, make it work. I remember trying to split a large white oak round. Splitting white oak leaves stringy flakes that still hold together, so I split, rotated, split, again until the entire round was split into pie pcs, except the center was still holding it all together. Pfft. Chainsaw at the time was too small. Splitter at the time was too small. 32in rounds were annoying - productive, but tough to handle and time consuming.
Fast forward to now. Stihl 462, slices same rounds into halves or quarters in about a minute. Home built splitter with side lift, and extendable blade. The blade will raise up to cut the million nibs holding on. In the last several years here dozens of the older white oaks died from oak wilt. The splitter was made specifically to handle those large rounds. Without it - all those nibs holding everything together just made it frustrating.
 
   / Never again #44  
Been there. Sharp chain, check. Noodling a pain, takes forever. Stubborn, check. New splitter, make it work. I remember trying to split a large white oak round. Splitting white oak leaves stringy flakes that still hold together, so I split, rotated, split, again until the entire round was split into pie pcs, except the center was still holding it all together. Pfft. Chainsaw at the time was too small. Splitter at the time was too small. 32in rounds were annoying - productive, but tough to handle and time consuming.
Fast forward to now. Stihl 462, slices same rounds into halves or quarters in about a minute. Home built splitter with side lift, and extendable blade. The blade will raise up to cut the million nibs holding on. In the last several years here dozens of the older white oaks died from oak wilt. The splitter was made specifically to handle those large rounds. Without it - all those nibs holding everything together just made it frustrating.

Even if I’m loading them whole and not noodling them all the way I like to put a saw cut in the opposite side as the splitter. They pretty much always crack all the way in half the first time that way instead of having to rotate it around and splitting it again. This one has a saw cut in it.
IMG_2366.JPG
 
   / Never again
  • Thread Starter
#46  
Been there. Sharp chain, check. Noodling a pain, takes forever. Stubborn, check. New splitter, make it work. I remember trying to split a large white oak round. Splitting white oak leaves stringy flakes that still hold together, so I split, rotated, split, again until the entire round was split into pie pcs, except the center was still holding it all together. Pfft. Chainsaw at the time was too small. Splitter at the time was too small. 32in rounds were annoying - productive, but tough to handle and time consuming.
Fast forward to now. Stihl 462, slices same rounds into halves or quarters in about a minute. Home built splitter with side lift, and extendable blade. The blade will raise up to cut the million nibs holding on. In the last several years here dozens of the older white oaks died from oak wilt. The splitter was made specifically to handle those large rounds. Without it - all those nibs holding everything together just made it frustrating.
A 70cc or over saw makes all the difference.
 
   / Never again #47  
Arrow, maybe you could fasten a rough platform or piece of plywood on the end of your forks to make moving the big blocks around and positioning them on the vertical splitter shoe easier. Sort of like this..

23_5_17-1.JPG



gg
 

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