I do wish,,youd find that s@#$ spreader,,along with the loader,,and take out the mess in this thread...............That does not compute, please put that into a ratio.
I do wish,,youd find that s@#$ spreader,,along with the loader,,and take out the mess in this thread...............That does not compute, please put that into a ratio.
1:1...? but that's only 50%.... you better go rethink this one.OK ..I'll play. I have to tweak the system a bit as you can't realy judge BS on single words even if @olyman was doing the writing.
OK then..if you'd prefer.
This above statmen is 100% BS
or a 1:1 statement to BS statement ratio
^^^^^
Right! 1:01:1...? but that's only 50%.... you better go rethink this one.
IF you see any internal damage, it wasn't the fall that caused it.My concern wasn't seeing a physical break in the tree, my concern was that if a certain procedure wasn't taken to drop the tree "correctly" that there may be internal damage to the wood. Damage that would only be seen as the tree was being milled or even further after, when it is made into furniture.
They overpaid at 9.00 each the excess should be subtracted to arrive at the 25.00. The tip comes from their funds. That is the best I can figure.Right! 1:0
Three guys go to rent a hotel for the night.
The clerk said its $30. They all pay $10 each. He realized he overcharge them $5
and sent the bellhop up to give then the change. They all took $1 back and gave the bellhop a $2 tip.
Now their invertment is $9 each.
3x9 =27 +2 for tip = $29
What happened to the other dollar?
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! yep1:1...? but that's only 50%.... you better go rethink this one.
good advice all- i know this isnt what you asked for, but it may help you- two things you might want to think about that affect the quality of your lumber, that are not based on the felling skill. 1) if the tree has grown with abnormal internal stress (pith widely off center is one indicator once cut) or has twist but isnt a spiral grain species (oak isnt) and 2) how good of a job that is done by the sawyer in cutting, stickering and ultimately kiln drying your lumber. all of these things can seriously degrade the value of the result if done the wrong way, especially with oak which can experience significant degrade if dried too fast.
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IF you see any internal damage, it wasn't the fall that caused it.
I've dropped hundreds of big tree's for my sawmill, I've never yet had one damaged in the fall that didn't ALREADY have that internal damage...
And, as a retired cabinet maker, yes I do know the difference...
SR
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