SB
Just suffering from cabin fever I guess. Twisted my ankle badly on ice three weeks ago and still hobbling around. Had to blow out some snow a few days ago and ii was not fun limping around. Sorry if I came across as telling people how to spend their money. Trying to understand the economics of getting the job done...which is a silly perspective if what I consider work is fun for others. Fun is priceless!!
I understand somewhat. I have an $18,000 shotgun I used when I was shooting competitively. Unless someone shoots competitively, and really enjoys it, it is a waste of money. In fact, it is likely a waste of money even if someone shoots a lot...LOL!! I bought it used for $12k so will likely get most of my money back. Hardly shoot enough now to justify keeping it, but I keep it any way. More fun for me to have the dumb thing and shoot the occasional good score than having the money in the bank. I know I am being dumb, but I am blessed, and can afford to be silly about it. (Took second place at the State championship in 2012 so it has some memories)
I was being judgmental on the splitter cost because I put my perspective on it. I would rather spend money on other things than stuff to process firewood. I burn wood to save money. The only "fun" part is using the tractor to process it, starting the fire and watching it burn. I have a wood insert with glass door, and we enjoy watching the fire. With my situation and costs, if LP was $.98/gal, I would save less than $500 a year burring wood. I would stop using wood as my primary heat source if that happened, but not much chance of that.
Thus my search for an easy and economical way to get the job done; even started a splitter thread here to tap the experience on this forum. Upgrading my splitter did not do it. I found a solution that works better for me. It may only work for me...but I think others can benefit from what I came up with. My buddy is a year older, and processes wood the traditional way. Fells trees, buck logs, loads the rounds into a pickup or 4 wheeler with a trailer, and splits with a large splitter. He was complaining about having to go with propane because his health is waning, but he cannot afford it. Now, he thinks he can use wood for another five years by changing to a system like I am using. My system is three times the cost of "free" wood but 1/2 the cost of $1.40/gal propane (and propane will not stay that cheap). By using purchased logs, I can process 10 cords a day. He can do one cord a day.
You, and others, are wired differently. Processing wood is one of your passions. Enjoy what makes you happy!! All good....