TermiteBuffet
ArboristSite Guru
Oooo, oooo I know the answer to this one ......I heard once where chains and straps belong.........
Pedal Tractor Loggin'
Oooo, oooo I know the answer to this one ......I heard once where chains and straps belong.........
Wait I thought it was whips and chains or is it straps and whips. Or..... yep now I am just showing how boring my life has been.I heard once where chains and straps belong.........
You will never have time to cut thru to the back. Dead saw.I think I would put a ratchet strap around the tree about 2 foot above where you are gonna cut. Get it as tight as you can. Cut a notch on the side facing the ground, give it about a 2" of hinge, plunge cut straight behind the point of the notch, and cut upwards and out the top. Be ready to move as soon as the saw cuts through on the top side as that tree is coming down. I mite even abandon the saw if pinched after the final cut.
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You need to remove as much compression wood as possible. Chairs occur in the compression wood. It leaning that hard the tree will likely sit tight on yer bar if you bore it. Also what if the tension wood is not that great and as soon as you poke thru the other side on your bore the tree takes off? You could face it (wide open). Bore the heart from the face. Then use a coos bay back cut. Make sure you cut the pinch side first. It won't take much on the other side to get it. Either way its going to be messy. Just make sure you don't kill yourself or the saw. That means keeping the bar in a place where you can easily get it out of instead of thru the middle of the tree. I do this kind of stuff every day for a living.Ok but I thought you are supposed to do a bore or plunge to keep it from barber chairing. It is hickory and they really like to do that.
So is it the consensus that in this circumstance it is better for a barber chair then a bore cut?
Thanks for that explanation. Compression wood being part of the bore cut helps explain how a bar might get pinched.Chairs occur in the compression wood. It leaning that hard the tree will likely sit tight on yer bar if you bore it.
You need to remove as much compression wood as possible. Chairs occur in the compression wood. It leaning that hard the tree will likely sit tight on yer bar if you bore it. Also what if the tension wood is not that great and as soon as you poke thru the other side on your bore the tree takes off? You could face it (wide open). Bore the heart from the face. Then use a coos bay back cut. Make sure you cut the pinch side first. It won't take much on the other side to get it. Either way its going to be messy. Just make sure you don't kill yourself or the saw. That means keeping the bar in a place where you can easily get it out of instead of thru the middle of the tree. I do this kind of stuff every day for a living.
You need to remove as much compression wood as possible. Chairs occur in the compression wood. It leaning that hard the tree will likely sit tight on yer bar if you bore it. Also what if the tension wood is not that great and as soon as you poke thru the other side on your bore the tree takes off? You could face it (wide open). Bore the heart from the face. Then use a coos bay back cut. Make sure you cut the pinch side first. It won't take much on the other side to get it. Either way its going to be messy. Just make sure you don't kill yourself or the saw. That means keeping the bar in a place where you can easily get it out of instead of thru the middle of the tree. I do this kind of stuff every day for a living.
You would be surprised. Bore the heart from the face. Then cut from behind the hinge to the back on both sides. You have to watch the second side cuz it might sit on yer tip then. You have to feel it. If it will go before getting to the other side cut as much off as you can from the side you're on and work over to the other side til it goes.The devil is in the details. Jusst how do you determine how much compression wood you can remove before sticking the saw. For the tree under discussion it ain't a gonna be very much!!
Harry K
Now if he went and did that this wicked cool thread would be over.at this rate it will die and fall on its own...just cut the damn thing!
You would be surprised. Bore the heart from the face. Then cut from behind the hinge to the back on both sides. You have to watch the second side cuz it might sit on yer tip then. You have to feel it. If it will go before getting to the other side cut as much off as you can from the side you're on and work over to the other side til it goes.
The actual spliting of the fibers when it chairs is the line where the compression and tension wood meet, its the highest point sheer force. Just thought I would throw that in there.
Thank you. I'm just trying to pass on what I've learned and been lucky to walk away from.Thanks for your instruction and patience. It is a safe bet to say you have a large but silent fan base here. Many of us are a "grasshopper" watching a master. I, for one, am surprised to learn how much compression wood is actually on the back side of the hinge of a hard leaner. For some reason I erroneously assumed the hinge was the dividing line between compression and tension wood on an extreme leaner.