If anyone has a Cone type (stickler) log spliter and want to get rid of it. I will pay the shipping to my address. Thanks garry1436@hotmail.com just email me.
Since this post is back up at the top, I'm looking for some feedback from those of you who have experience with a Bark Buster PTO screw splitter.
I've been making split rail (AKA zig zag, snakerail, battlefield) fence out of oak 10' long averaging 20" in diameter. I've worn out myself and a couple of splitting wedges and sledge hammers doing it Abe Lincoln style. How would one of these work for splitting 10' logs? I'm envisioning I'd remove the log rest, stay on the tractor and back up to stick it in the side of the log. I'm assuming I'd try it closer to an end than the middle to get the split going easier (but far enough from the end so it wouldn't spin). Would this most likely flip me on my butt, break the tractor, break the splitter, or just get it stuck so I have to cut it out? I figured you wouldn't have the safety concerns everyone has pointed out when standing next to it on the ground and splitting shorter firewood but would it split it and if it didn't split it, at low rpm without a slip clutch what would I break? Does the Bark Buster have a shear bolt? I can't tell from the pictures.
Likewise, what would happen if you backed one of these into the side of a stump and put the tractor in neutral once the screw bit in (so the tractor is pulled into the stump since the stump wouldn't move)? I'm envisioning splitting a stump from multiple sides to make it easier to later remove (chain or FEL).
I've seen a couple couple of Bark Busters for sale and thought it might be worth toying these ideas. I've got a hydraulic wedge style splitter to do my firewood splitting so I wouldn't be using it for that.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks for the response Reg. If I'm following you right you are envisioning it mounted vertical with the rotation forces horizontal or in the yaw plane. I'd actually mount it unmodified so that I'm "drilling" in to the side of the log and the rotational forces would be in the roll plane or perpendicular to the ground. The splitter would be almost horizontal to the deck. In fact, I could leave the log I'm splitting up on the first layer of the log deck to make it level with the splitter.
Also, as mounted, I think the bit would sit too far back from the tires to be able to position the log diagonally between the two back tires. To clarify my question for those who have experience with the Bark Buster, is it durable and powerful enough to attempt to split hardwood logs this long? Does it have a shear pin? It seems most of the posts on this forum on the Bark Buster are from people looking for parts because they have broken them.