Looking for a log splitter

   / Looking for a log splitter #31  
This is in Watoma Wiscinsin that this ole timer took a
275 gal home heating fuel tank added a chimney and
a door and he burns logs that will fit inside and he only
needs to add more wood in 3 or 4 days and it keeps his
home nice and warm. no need to split any wood with his
set up.

willy
Curious to know how an ole timer lifts "logs", I'm an ole timer with an outdoor wood burner, and it will fit logs much larger than I can lift. I still have to split wood to a size I can manage.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter
  • Thread Starter
#32  
Which post mentioned that one? Do you have a link to it?
Nobody mentioned this particular unit, I read some reviews and watched some videos on YouTube and selected it on my own. I'll get the machine on Tuesday.
This cajun fella made a modification to lift the logs up. I don't need that now, but my day is coming!
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #33  
Nobody mentioned this particular unit, I read some reviews and watched some videos on YouTube and selected it on my own. I'll get the machine on Tuesday.
This cajun fella made a modification to lift the logs up. I don't need that now, but my day is coming!
Home Depot has the 24 ton for 1300 and the 37 ton for 1600.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #34  
Curious to know how an ole timer lifts "logs", I'm an ole timer with an outdoor wood burner, and it will fit logs much larger than I can lift. I still have to split wood to a size I can manage.
The Longwood wood furnace that accepted 4 foot long logs had a roller at the bottom of the door. You put the end of the log on the roller and pushed it into the stove.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter
  • Thread Starter
#35  
Home Depot has the 24 ton for 1300 and the 37 ton for 1600.
That's what I paid for the 37t from Home Depot. Tractor Supply was higher, and Amazon was out of stock.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #36  
That lift table is pure GENIOUS!!!! I bolted some 3/4 plywood to mine just to increase my working area, and to be able to keep more material close to the splitter so it's easier and faster to split. Picking up the rounds is where all the work is, and having a way to get them up there would make life so much better!!!!
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #37  
My countyline from TSC has been a solid unit and has split cord after cord. It’s easy to start and works well. It works vertically, but I almost never use it this way.

I pull it around my property, but the wheel bearings can’t handle speed and I think it’s rated at like 25mph max so it should be trailered for any distance. I’ve looked at some of the pro ones and while they are amazing, I could literally buy 8 or 9 of what I have and it works well.
We've had one of those for years, except that ours is red. Dunno if that means it's newer or older. It's handled anything we can get to it, including some big, twisted stuff. We have towed it a mile or so, but I would agree that it really isn't designed for towing on the highway any distance. Wouldn't be legal in New York, anyway, as it doesn't have any lights. No place to mount a license plate, either.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #38  
here is a short clip of my Slit-Fire log splitter it will split up to 36 inch lengths and I have split 40 inch red oak diameter by 30 inch length. It lifted the block just fine but was very hard to manipulate once on the splitter-Now, when I get logs that size, I just cut them in two for ease of handling.

 
   / Looking for a log splitter #39  
I've had a 27 ton Troy Bilt log splitter that I bought from Lowes for well over a decade now. In my opinion, the most important thing to look for in a log splitter is the engine. Honda makes the very best small engine, and all the other brands try to compare to how close they are to Honda, but none are as good. My log splitter starts every time I need to use it. It runs all day, and it's trouble free. Other brands work well when new, but quickly become difficult to start, or keep running.

27 tons has proven to be enough for anything I put on it. I can split anything I can pick up, but I try to keep my rounds in the 12 to 20 inch range. Some are bigger, but it's getting harder and harder to pick up that much oak as I get older. I only use the tilt function when I get a round that is just too heave to pick up. I hate splitting them that way, it's just a lot more work and effort.

I added plywood tables to either side of my splitter, so nothing falls off of it, and when I split a round in half, I can usually keep that half on the plywood, and work on the other half. The fewer times I have to bend over to pick something up, the better!!!

One tank of gas in the splitter will fill up the bed in my Kawasaki Mule. I like to run the engine until it runs out of gas. I normally only split one load per day. Then I still have plenty of energy to do other things. A full day of splitting and stacking wood will wear me out for the next day.

Lowes doesn't sell Troy Bilt splitters anymore. They have Craftsman, but I wouldn't spend any money on that brand. Used to be good, but now it's really bad. I think Northern Tool has some log splitters with Honda engines. I don't think the hydraulics or the rest of the splitter is that different from one brand to another. The only thing that matters is the Honda engine.
My experience is pretty much right on with eddiewalker. We heat and cook with wood. 4-5 full cords of oak and hickory a year. I go back in the mountains with my k. Mule, my old Stihl, and come out with a load up to the roll bar. Split it and stack it and it’s a days work for a 73 year old man.
I've had a 27 ton Troy Bilt log splitter that I bought from Lowes for well over a decade now. In my opinion, the most important thing to look for in a log splitter is the engine. Honda makes the very best small engine, and all the other brands try to compare to how close they are to Honda, but none are as good. My log splitter starts every time I need to use it. It runs all day, and it's trouble free. Other brands work well when new, but quickly become difficult to start, or keep running.

27 tons has proven to be enough for anything I put on it. I can split anything I can pick up, but I try to keep my rounds in the 12 to 20 inch range. Some are bigger, but it's getting harder and harder to pick up that much oak as I get older. I only use the tilt function when I get a round that is just too heave to pick up. I hate splitting them that way, it's just a lot more work and effort.

I added plywood tables to either side of my splitter, so nothing falls off of it, and when I split a round in half, I can usually keep that half on the plywood, and work on the other half. The fewer times I have to bend over to pick something up, the better!!!

One tank of gas in the splitter will fill up the bed in my Kawasaki Mule. I like to run the engine until it runs out of gas. I normally only split one load per day. Then I still have plenty of energy to do other things. A full day of splitting and stacking wood will wear me out for the next day.

Lowes doesn't sell Troy Bilt splitters anymore. They have Craftsman, but I wouldn't spend any money on that brand. Used to be good, but now it's really bad. I think Northern Tool has some log splitters with Honda engines. I don't think the hydraulics or the rest of the splitter is that different from one brand to another. The only thing that matters is the Honda engine.
I've had a 27 ton Troy Bilt log splitter that I bought from Lowes for well over a decade now. In my opinion, the most important thing to look for in a log splitter is the engine. Honda makes the very best small engine, and all the other brands try to compare to how close they are to Honda, but none are as good. My log splitter starts every time I need to use it. It runs all day, and it's trouble free. Other brands work well when new, but quickly become difficult to start, or keep running.

27 tons has proven to be enough for anything I put on it. I can split anything I can pick up, but I try to keep my rounds in the 12 to 20 inch range. Some are bigger, but it's getting harder and harder to pick up that much oak as I get older. I only use the tilt function when I get a round that is just too heave to pick up. I hate splitting them that way, it's just a lot more work and effort.

I added plywood tables to either side of my splitter, so nothing falls off of it, and when I split a round in half, I can usually keep that half on the plywood, and work on the other half. The fewer times I have to bend over to pick something up, the better!!!

One tank of gas in the splitter will fill up the bed in my Kawasaki Mule. I like to run the engine until it runs out of gas. I normally only split one load per day. Then I still have plenty of energy to do other things. A full day of splitting and stacking wood will wear me out for the next day.

Lowes doesn't sell Troy Bilt splitters anymore. They have Craftsman, but I wouldn't spend any money on that brand. Used to be good, but now it's really bad. I think Northern Tool has some log splitters with Honda engines. I don't think the hydraulics or the rest of the splitter is that different from one brand to another. The only thing that matters is the Honda engine.
My experience is pretty much right on with eddiewalker. We heat and cook with wood. 4-5 full cords of oak and hickory a year. I go back in the mountains with my k. Mule, my old Stihl, hookaroon, and come out with a load up to the roll bar. Split it and stack it and it’s a days work for a 73 year old man.
 
   / Looking for a log splitter #40  
I went with a 37 ton Northern Tool over 10 years ago. The only issue I have had with it is the cylinder being mounted too close to the beam creating a problem with getting plugged up with chips. Rated at 37 tons it has no problem bending things as it continues to pack chips under the nose of the cylinder. In the end it powers through the 48" pecan stumps fairly easily and has worked well.
 
 

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