Jacks work the treat, though don't even bother with anything less then a 20ton jack, the plates a must have but get one 3/8" thick or thicker. And still keep a wedge in there as a back up, hydraulics fail then yer really in a pickle. (I have a pair of 25t jacks I use regularly, the plate has a piece of tubing welded on to keep them centered over the jacks ram, for a one shot deal you should be ok though)Greetings.
Although I am not a novice at falling, this is the first time in my 65 years down here that I am faced with having to fall two good-sized trees, one poplar and one sweet gum, both a good 36" or more at the butt. Looking for a cost-effective, feasible insurance policy to assure that they will fall where I want 'em to fall. And I can't afford a Silvey. Would a hydraulic bottle jack work SAFELY in a pinch? If so, would you recommend about a 4X4 inch piece of flat steel being placed between the tree and the jack to avoid the jack penetrating the tree itself as the jack does its job?
Thanks.
As mentioned above, a good quality rope 1/2-2/3rd ups the tree is much better insurance as long as you have enough ass to hold it, yer pick em up truck might not be enough, better if you have a redirect that get the pull going low to the pull rig, rather then direct to the tree, as it can and probably will lift said pull rig off the ground and catapult it if things go bad. (not like trebuchet bad but still not good)
Lastly, I wouldn't rely on a jack or wedges in a poplar tree out here, I've done yes, and it can be done again, but they have realllly brittle wood and can just pop off the stump with too much pressure and not enough lift. Then they go wherever they want and its generally a very bad day.