my new Firewood toys

   / my new Firewood toys
  • Thread Starter
#51  
I have seen this video before. love the self feed but the product it makes really isn't proper for my wood/oil combo furnace which takes a 24" stick. These look better suited for an old fashion top feed wood heater or old fashion kitchen wood cook stove... again, top feed.
 
   / my new Firewood toys #52  
Wait WAIT! LOL,


1st, My new umm mantra?

"If I make it idiot proof and get hurt, my IQ drops beyond repair. If I live dangerously and nothing happens I look like a hero "
Quoted by a Maineiac :laughing:


BUT LOOK at this! Here is a butt feedin' Superpilke w/ Slo-Mo on that combo rotatin' - choppin' - splittin' head, ingenious! :thumbsup::thumbsup:

[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ORDJ-7dZG8&feature=fvwp&NR=1[/ame]
 
   / my new Firewood toys
  • Thread Starter
#53  
That's pretty nice right there!
 
   / my new Firewood toys #54  
What convinced me on a skid steer was how much work I got done with one last year. I borrowed one from my grandpa and got every last tree brought to the log deck. Comparing it to the little 16 hp Yanmar i had it would have taken weeks using my 3 point forks. So this year I upgraded to my 61 hp Deere skid steer, it is bigger than the one i used last year and will lift considerably more, all I need are some pallet forks. We cut all our logs into 8' sections, it makes it a lot easier to bring them back to the deck and they are easy to stack/unstack when we begin cutting. What I also accomplished on the skid steer was along with getting all the logs to the log deck, i was able to clean up every last tree limb with the pallet forks and put them on the burn pile. :thumbsup: Some time this year I plan to build a hydraulic log splitter for the front of my Deere so I can split firewood from inside the cab. :thumbsup:

So far I have used my skid steer to push trees and brush back away from the road and I was very impressed at how much power it had. I have also maintained the local gravel road (filling in the pot holes/grading/etc.) and i cant believe I went so long without a bucket! :laughing:

Dude, you don't need forks - you need a grapple! The control you will gain with a grapple is far better than forks for handling logs. Orders of magnitude better. Logs need to be pretty near perfectly balanced on forks or they rock and fall off with the slightest disturbance. Not so with a grapple. Then when it comes to placing the log, you can gently release it instead of smashing it into things as it rolls off. Much better for loading something like a processor deck.

Look at post #37 for reference...
 
   / my new Firewood toys #55  
OP, I'd love to have your wood processor for just 2 days. I have eighty 20' long logs I need to cut, split and stack. I will have to spend every spare weekend I have for the next year cutting up this pile.

Congrats on your setup. You can bet that if I burned 20 cords a year, I'd have a wood processor too.

Obed
 

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   / my new Firewood toys
  • Thread Starter
#56  
a grapple can work with forks as well.
 
   / my new Firewood toys #57  
There are quite a few vids on the superpilke and bilke--I think that 2nd one was similar, might be wrong. Anyway, you're right about it not being right for many stoves, I myself prefer two sizes of wood 18" and 22" to stack alternately each row.. This machine looks to make 8-10" split rounds.. but...

You nailed it right on the head. I think this setup would be most perfect for OWB's, preferably a top load setup so you can have a massive pile of limb and tree top wood to scoop into with your loader. Limb wood really does make nice kindling, yet not worth the time--piles don't come close to equaling out at the end of the day. However, with the superpilke you could toss handfuls of branches in there at a time and process it all; log, limb, and leaf. (you can tell I don't run a chipper:laughing:)

My father used to do the limb wood processing with the upside down skillsaw when he was still in good health. Now I still don't mess with limb wood unless it's 3" or thicker, and every time I light off a bonfire I think of pops and his mind set on getting everything you could out of a tree.
 
   / my new Firewood toys #58  
Here is something I built this winter using a video I saw on youtube as an example. I call it a limb processor. I haven't "fine tuned" it yet as I haven't started cutting wood yet, letting the snow melt off my roads and giving things a chance to dry out some.I hadn't yet threw any paint at it when I took these pics but I assure you it's all painted red now.take a look-

You are definitely on the right track with this setup, the cut limbs will fall into the bed and a bit of poking from the rear with a long stick will make room for more. What you want to stay away from is having anything on the ground near the saw that you can slip or trip on. I used to have that skillsaw mounted on an old sawhorse and the pile behind and around it would become fairly large, yet I still remember pops doing the wet floor skid on a cut limb once, thought he was going to grab that blade for a moment. I never let the pile get too big before moving the setup after that.

The one far superior advantage in safety with the chainsaw setup is that the chain isn't spinning until you set the limb down and push the lever, vs running at full speed constantly.
 
   / my new Firewood toys #59  
Wow ! 20 cord a year, you might want to invest in some insulation. My house is 3200 square feet and my shop 2100 and my garage detached is 800 all heated by wood, some forced air propane in my house and I burn 6-10 cord a year, how do you burn 20 cord of hard wood.
:thumbsup:
 

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