ouch

   / ouch #1  

randy41

Veteran Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2005
Messages
1,794
Location
Linden VA
i know a lot of you guys have them fancy log splitters that you hook up to your tractor but for those of you still living in the dark ages like me and split by hand....dontcha just hate it when you miss by just a little and the log bites your leg? and why did i think it was so funny when my oldest son was a teenager and it happened to him?
 
   / ouch #2  
Worse yet would be if the maul glanced off the log and hit your leg -

What is the toughest wood you have to split?
 
   / ouch #3  
After over 30 years of making my firewood, my shins are scarred top to bottom. Doesn't matter if I am using the splitter or hand spitting, they still get hit. I figured out many years ago that a pair of shin guards like some sports use would be a good investment. Now all I have to do is go buy some some day.

Harry K
 
   / ouch
  • Thread Starter
#4  
my woodpiles got mostly locust with some poplar. i find the toughest split is knotty locust. but this didnt happen because the log was tough to split. it happened because my concentration was slipping. i guess i've been splitting for about 30 years also.
 
   / ouch #5  
I found that putting the round inside an old tire before you wack it makes for a lot fewer shin problems. The worst wood to split is Elm. I can remember having 4 wedges stuck in one round and having to cut them out with a saw.
 
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   / ouch #7  
turnkey4099 said:
After over 30 years of making my firewood, my shins are scarred top to bottom. Doesn't matter if I am using the splitter or hand spitting, they still get hit. I figured out many years ago that a pair of shin guards like some sports use would be a good investment. Now all I have to do is go buy some some day.

Harry K


I wear street hockey shin guards. They are strong enough to deflect the hurt, absorb the gash from the maul, and simple enough to use.

When they come out, the kids disappear - It's WORK time.

-Mike Z.
 
   / ouch #8  
I don't split as much as I used to.

I always found it easier and faster to use a maul over a wood splitter when I was young and cut and sold wood to make some extra spending money. Knowing how to read the end of the log helps a bunch. Then again, I never knew what a maul was until I moved to the city - we always called it a "Go Devil" and maul was something a bear did to you if you got too close.

Knowing not to try to split blackgum also helps :D

I'm sure splitters have come along way since then, but it seemed like just as much work, if not more, to keep moving that log around so the splitter could split it. Guess I never got that technique down and don't plan on trying it now.

My shins have a few scars too :)
 
   / ouch #9  
Evening Randy.
Have piece come flying off and slap the boys...yikes...don't think it would have made much differents if it was hard or soft wood. :(
 
   / ouch #10  
I've split some Elm that was a little tough, but by far the toughest to split I ever encountered was a big Sycamore stump. I was using an axe, wedges, and a sledge hammer (before I got a splitting maul that was so much better) and I drove two big wedges into the Sycamore and it was like putting a finish nail in a 2 x 4; didn't split at all. Instead of a straight grain, it was a twist grain. I couldn't even get my wedges out, so they had to stay there until that wood aged another year.
 

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