Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...!

   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #31  
I know, that's why I mentioned it. I have to be consistent with my critiques or it looks like I play favorites.;) On the other forum, I think there were several people that thought I went out of my way to find fault, yet people were posting pictures and asking for opinions. I'd trust your welding and fabricating abilities for anything I ever needed. Funny, old age doesn't seem to affect your welding machines.:cool2: I suspect with a little more practice, you'll get better with age too!:drink:
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #32  
Maybe I missed it because I was so tired:confused3:. I had to drive to California pick him and his tractor up. Drop the tractor off in Hoquiam to have a FEL built and mounted. Then we started the log splitter, and counter weight while that was being done. Then a trip back down to Hoquiam to get his tractor.
 

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   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #33  
Artisan I started a thread over on Welding Web, the reason for the thread was for my learning of how to beef up a beam. I thought I'd seen just about everything you can possibly do to a beam. But in reality all I know is what an engineer put in front of me. I used your thread here as an example of why beams sometimes need to be strengthened. A member there came up with what I thought was a logical reason why the flange on the beam of your log splitter curled up. Here is a link to the thread, member norite post # 16.
Strengthen beams question.
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #34  
Having worked considerably with firewood processors, and even built a splitter years ago, there are several things. 1) The cylinder must be as parallel as possible with the beam otherwise your going to have problems. I saw the one picture of the cylinder posted where it was digging into the bean, but the rear end of the cylinder was way high. 2) The horizontal splitting plane on many fire wood processers "float" if the vertical plane is fully fixed. In other words the horizontal plane drops down over the vertical one and is welded to a collar of sorts. There's a lot of physics going on with a splitter, and you just can't bend the rules when there's that much pressure on it. Anything not right will show up quickly. Learned that from the first splitter build...bend the beam too and kept breaking the slide. Of course splitting seasoned 24" cherry wood like we were any small thing out of line is going to find the path of least resistance. Wood has a good strength to weight ratio to say the least.
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #35  
You mentioned adding 3/4 to the top. What about adding 3/4 under the top flange? How long is the slide on the pusher block? Make it as long as possible to spread the stress. Is the ram centered with the height of the horizontal wedge?
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...!
  • Thread Starter
#36  
Re: Adding material to the top;

Understand that the rear of the hydraulic cylinder is attached to the I Beam w/ a massive
block welded to the I BEAM, welded like it needs to hold back 35 TONS of pressure, maybe more.
I has a hole in it so you can attach the rear of the cylinder to the I BEAM... It would be a
huge job for me to make anew and cut it off just to raise it 3/4" or so.

Adding any material to the top of the I BEAM will change the angle of attack of the cylinder
in relation to the I BEAM. I would have to cut off and re-do a LOT to do this and keep
the cylinder parallel to the I BEAM. Before I would do that I would do like the guy
from So. America on weldingweb web says, that being, GET A NEW I BEAM.

I am in believe as well as Mark @ Everlast, (see post #34) that the Cylinder NEEDS to be
parallel to the I Beam or very bad things can happen if you truly put the machine to use
w/ really big and hard rounds.


Shield Arc;
I read the weldingwelb thread and the #16 post is the reason I surmise / I was trying to convey,
in post #1 here. I am pretty sure I know why it failed...It was that poorly designed angle. Go back to
post #1 and look at the top picture you didn't post over at weldingweb.


The jest of this thread was to try to discover any adverse effects heating the top of
the flange and beating it back to plumb would have on the hardness of the I Beam
I am heating. "I" think that me changing the single angled horizontal wedge to
a 2 paced angle will fix things.

Indeed I did end up heating it and sledgehammering it back down to almost plumb.

In my first picture you can see the horizontal splitting wedge POST me changing the
one angle horizontal wedge, into a wedge w/ more of a point, like and Axe would be.
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...!
  • Thread Starter
#38  
Nice army truck BTW. Do you use it much?

Hopefully in the retirement future I will use it a lot, till then it is a BLAST to work on
and it gets driven once a month weather or not !

It is an M925A1 ... 6x6 49" tall x 14" wide tires, 7 of them... :)
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...! #39  
Hopefully in the retirement future I will use it a lot, till then it is a BLAST to work on
and it gets driven once a month weather or not !

It is an M925A1 ... 6x6 49" tall x 14" wide tires, 7 of them... :)

Did you get it at a gov't auction? Is it a 2.5 ton or 5 ton?
 
   / Log Splitter I-Beam BENDING...!
  • Thread Starter
#40  
It is an M939 Series 5 Ton. Yes from GL. Full blown Air brakes, Cummins NHC-250, Allison 5 speed auto, Rockwells, Transfer case. 6x6. She weighs about 27K as she sits today. 20K winch on front. I have serviced the thing to the max and by the book. I would not hesitate to hop in it and drive to the north of Alaska and back. No kidding. My wallet would protest but the truck will just go and go and go.
We believe it's mission was attached to the Marines pre-positioning forces out of Florida.

When I bought it, well just before I bought it, I found out you need to have a commercial license
to operate it as a civilian. (Some will argue that till the death but frankly, I have too much to loose in
a court battle, so...)
so I hit up Dootson truck driving school and just 9 days later I had a
Class B License in my pocket, w/ Air brakes, Passenger, and Tank endorsements, plus my motorcycle.
I can drive it as a school bus and interstate.

The DMV handed me I think it was 7 tests, all at one time. Fun Stuff.
 

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