WinterDeere
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2011
- Messages
- 5,526
- Location
- Philadelphia
- Tractor
- John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
I've brought home many very large oaks, in fact there was a period where nearly everything I was dragging home was 3 - 5 ft DBH oaks. They get heavy quick, thanks to that old R-squared rule. The heaviest individual rounds I've ever split were just shy of 60" diameter white oak, and at 20" lengths weighed right around 2000 lb. each.Someone I know said he had a pin oak tree in his backyard he was going to have taken down. I thought if he just gets it dropped I’ll haul it out of there for free just to get the firewood. Once I saw the tree I didn’t make the offer. It’s huge, maybe 42” in diameter or a little larger.
I always bring logs home whole, and buck them to length at home, but I do have to cut any oak The biggest problem with these big sticks, other than the wear and tear handling those big rounds puts on your body, is fastening them down in a solid-side trailer. I take some winding hilly roads getting home, and anyone who knows old PA roads know they're barely wide enough for two small cars to pass, and zero shoulders... the edge of the road usually rolls straight into a drainage ditch. I always envision a single 5000+ lb. stick rolling around in my trailer, the inertia of it taking my 2000 lb. trailer right off the road as I drive around a corner.
My trailer is only GVWR = 7000 lb., and with a curb weight near 2000 lb., this leaves room for only 5k lb. payload. That means I usually have to cut any oak much larger than 31" diameter to less than my usual 15 feet. Then there's that whole game of trying to tie the short stubby round thing down in the middle of the trailer, centered over the front axle to manage the hitch weight on a 1/2 ton pickup.