groundcover
Veteran Member
Reminds me of grandpa's last words , " you still holding that ladder?"
I attended and was certified at the NFS. The university here which is MI tech have a forestry department and they do them. If that doesn't help, asking at your saw shop is the next best guess.I would not even know where to find such a class in my area!
Who offers them, the saw manufactuer?
Worth watching this video....Just this summer, I topped a dead hemlock that was a hazard to nearby buildings.
That entailed climbing the shaft with irons, limbing as I went up. I'm not young, and not particularly familiar with climbing methods. But I went as high as I thought necessary to drop the upper part short of any danger.
On the final ascent, I used a double flip line, and cinched in tight in case I would be knocked off the climbing spikes.
I wore a forestry helmet, gloves, long pants and steel toed boots.
The felling cut was made with a one handed toy electric chains saw. (Makita)
The top hung on a nearby maple tree in the horizontal position. I had just enough time to express "OH! Sh-t" in consideration of having the but end of that top expel me from that lofty perch.
Then it let go, falling safely below as I waggled and swayed on that free swinging hemlock stem.
I don't feel a need to do that again... safety wise. I'm getting old.
But what a ride!
You only live ONCE!
I don't understand that. Why would they work on gas saws and not electric? Same chain, same bars. The electric is just easier to stop. (And compared to big saws, less powerful) I'm not an engineer, but common sense seems to indicate that chaps that will prevent harm from a gas saw would be at least as effective against an electric saw..
Do note that most chaps won't stop most electric saws. Read your warning labels, know what your PPE does... and doesn't do.
I can't find the video... Never mind I did. You'd not find me at that job site.Worth watching this video....
Electric saws produce 100% of available torque as soon as the trigger is pulled.I don't understand that. Why would they work on gas saws and not electric? Same chain, same bars. The electric is just easier to stop. (And compared to big saws, less powerful) I'm not an engineer, but common sense seems to indicate that chaps that will prevent harm from a gas saw would be at least as effective against an electric saw.
But the chaps are designed to stop the larger saws made running at top RPM.Electric saws produce 100% of available torque as soon as the trigger is pulled.
When you roll the dice and take your chances...once in a while you hit the jackpot!I have never worn a safety device in my life outside of safety glasses maybe 50% of the time.
Been at it for 40+ years without a significant injury.
Added: I in no way condone this. My injuries have been mostly falls or a few concussions.