DaveNH
Gold Member
(Saga of granite splitting continues)
I'm from New Hampshire, the granite state. I'm trying to rid the yard of some of the larger boulders so grass mowing will be easier, look nicer, etc. I have a small tractor and skidded "the little ones" away to the side of my field. I'm starting to split the larger ones, down in size so that my tractor can pull them. So far I haven't figured out the knack of getting nice square straight pieces. I'm drilling with a rotary hammer, 3/4" bit about 6-7 inches deep. I'm using 3/4" feather and wedges (about 6" long). My problem is that once the boulder starts to split, it always curves off at about a 45 degree angle from the bottom of the feather and wedges. Yes, the objective is met, the stones are smaller but I'd like to know what I'm doing wrong? (if anything, maybe it's just these New Hampshire rocks) I've seen pictures of rocks split right down the middle. I'd at least like get a few good square pieces for steps in front of my sheds.
ANY HELP WOULD BE GREATLY APPRECIATED.
Dave
I'm from New Hampshire, the granite state. I'm trying to rid the yard of some of the larger boulders so grass mowing will be easier, look nicer, etc. I have a small tractor and skidded "the little ones" away to the side of my field. I'm starting to split the larger ones, down in size so that my tractor can pull them. So far I haven't figured out the knack of getting nice square straight pieces. I'm drilling with a rotary hammer, 3/4" bit about 6-7 inches deep. I'm using 3/4" feather and wedges (about 6" long). My problem is that once the boulder starts to split, it always curves off at about a 45 degree angle from the bottom of the feather and wedges. Yes, the objective is met, the stones are smaller but I'd like to know what I'm doing wrong? (if anything, maybe it's just these New Hampshire rocks) I've seen pictures of rocks split right down the middle. I'd at least like get a few good square pieces for steps in front of my sheds.
ANY HELP WOULD BE GREATLY APPRECIATED.
Dave