ning
Elite Member
I've been considering getting a log splitter.
I'm a homeowner, and primarily heat with wood (gas furnace back-up, but I prefer a hot roaring fire and it heats the house just how I like it - hot in the living room, cooler in the bedrooms), but where I live I tend to burn perhaps 2 cords per year of mostly oak. I've typically bought wood, but as I've been doing more and more on my land, I've accumulated quite a pile of rounds, which I hand-split for the most part. I can continue hand-splitting, but it takes me a long time and I've other chores I could be doing instead.
So, a couple questions.
First - do log splitters do ok splitting dry/seasoned rounds? Assume oak; live oak and black oak for the most part. The pine that's here I can sneeze and to break up so I'm not concerned.
If they do fine with dry rounds, I'll probably just rent a splitter once or twice a year; the local yard (which takes me about 1h20m round-trip including paperwork) charges $55 for 4 hours (of which I can get maybe 3 hours operating time) or $80 for a full day.
Otherwise, there's a semi-local craigslist ad that has this monster:

Apparently it's a 6" cylinder with an 18" stroke (not sure what the rod is).
My tractor has 9gpm to the implements, which means a ~28sec full cycle time if the rod is 2".
Seller on the phone states I'd probably want to add quick couplers or perhaps replace the hoses; he's asking $400 for the unit.
There's no stand, he said he just drops it to the ground fully. Apparently it's about 7' long.
Should I just get it? I've got implement sickness and wouldn't mind splitting wood an hour here an hour there instead of saving it up for a day's splitting and stacking; does this appear decent?
The paint is new - the implement is old. Things to look for?
I'm a homeowner, and primarily heat with wood (gas furnace back-up, but I prefer a hot roaring fire and it heats the house just how I like it - hot in the living room, cooler in the bedrooms), but where I live I tend to burn perhaps 2 cords per year of mostly oak. I've typically bought wood, but as I've been doing more and more on my land, I've accumulated quite a pile of rounds, which I hand-split for the most part. I can continue hand-splitting, but it takes me a long time and I've other chores I could be doing instead.
So, a couple questions.
First - do log splitters do ok splitting dry/seasoned rounds? Assume oak; live oak and black oak for the most part. The pine that's here I can sneeze and to break up so I'm not concerned.
If they do fine with dry rounds, I'll probably just rent a splitter once or twice a year; the local yard (which takes me about 1h20m round-trip including paperwork) charges $55 for 4 hours (of which I can get maybe 3 hours operating time) or $80 for a full day.
Otherwise, there's a semi-local craigslist ad that has this monster:

Apparently it's a 6" cylinder with an 18" stroke (not sure what the rod is).
My tractor has 9gpm to the implements, which means a ~28sec full cycle time if the rod is 2".
Seller on the phone states I'd probably want to add quick couplers or perhaps replace the hoses; he's asking $400 for the unit.
There's no stand, he said he just drops it to the ground fully. Apparently it's about 7' long.
Should I just get it? I've got implement sickness and wouldn't mind splitting wood an hour here an hour there instead of saving it up for a day's splitting and stacking; does this appear decent?
The paint is new - the implement is old. Things to look for?