This is the type of model you might see in D. Douglas Dent's "Proffessional Timber Falling-a Procedural Approach".
Such mechanical, straight forward diagrams to repeatedly poor over, have helped me get a real feel for all this.
If it takes removing so much fiber across face to fold, it doesn't have to be even, it can be eliminated in such a fashion, as to leave diffrent combinations of fibre for diffrent applications.
The outside corners of the hinge, give the most leveraged pull to the opposite face, eliminating some of the fibres, under the side of off balance pull , or head lean to one side of hinge, leaving more fiber pulling with greater leverage from the opposite side . You would always fold into the face of the hinge, this manipulation of the positioning of the final fibre on folding is to even off balance of pull across the axis of the length of the hinge.
It is kinda like, if u cut the guy wire on a tent, it falls the opposite direction, it releases it to go that way, so as it is here too. So if head weight pulls to left, it isn't going to fall to the right against that weight of pull. So eliminating the fibre that keeps it from going right is ok, cuz it can't, seeing as the fibre that controls right hand drift is on the left (under the off balance head weight), it is okay to eliminate this fibre. Then that amount of fibre isn't lost, the log will folde at same amount of fibers holding, those fibres are now scheduled to be on the opposite side of hinge, the cross axis to head weight.
Exactly at the highest leveraged position to fight the off balance head lean on the opposite side or cross axis.
Such mechanical, straight forward diagrams to repeatedly poor over, have helped me get a real feel for all this.
If it takes removing so much fiber across face to fold, it doesn't have to be even, it can be eliminated in such a fashion, as to leave diffrent combinations of fibre for diffrent applications.
The outside corners of the hinge, give the most leveraged pull to the opposite face, eliminating some of the fibres, under the side of off balance pull , or head lean to one side of hinge, leaving more fiber pulling with greater leverage from the opposite side . You would always fold into the face of the hinge, this manipulation of the positioning of the final fibre on folding is to even off balance of pull across the axis of the length of the hinge.
It is kinda like, if u cut the guy wire on a tent, it falls the opposite direction, it releases it to go that way, so as it is here too. So if head weight pulls to left, it isn't going to fall to the right against that weight of pull. So eliminating the fibre that keeps it from going right is ok, cuz it can't, seeing as the fibre that controls right hand drift is on the left (under the off balance head weight), it is okay to eliminate this fibre. Then that amount of fibre isn't lost, the log will folde at same amount of fibers holding, those fibres are now scheduled to be on the opposite side of hinge, the cross axis to head weight.
Exactly at the highest leveraged position to fight the off balance head lean on the opposite side or cross axis.
Last edited: