Hi all,
I'm new to this forum and have already gained an enormous amount of helpful information from it. I've got a 12 acre block with some old timber lying around that we've put on the market and as such I want to get the good timber off before it sells.
As it's very steep and the logs are inaccessible I decided to use a CSM. I bought an 076AV and got a 44" bar and built a cheap CSM after spending a few hours reading the threads in this forum.
The mill as shown in the pic below is just light aluminium and rather dodgy, I'm about to try again and build another one. After about 7 cuts it started to get a bit of movement in the rivet joints and with the 076 on a large log it didn't remain square. I could cross brace it however I think i'll go with steel and weld it. Probably the worst aux oiler you've ever seen (drink bottle with 3m pipe and two inline taps zip tied onto the mill, not hooked up in the pic) but it actually seemed to work ok.
I started with a smaller log and then moved onto the hollow one in the pic. Found that with the flex in the mill and the narrow bars of the mill catching on the log I needed to use the ladder as a guide for every cut. The hollow log was in a perfect sloping spot however the first log had to be moved around to get the clearance and height to mill it. Used a kangaroo/hi lift jack but it was a bit unstable (need to make an attachment like BobL) and stuffed around for ages, complete PITA.
I've got a few logs that are the same size as the hollow one but completely solid and can't wait to get into them but I want to fix the mill first and make sure I do it right. The slabs I got are mostly flat (except a couple of the first ones!) and had good luck as they don't have any rot or termite damage. The chain I'm using is single skip however I haven't ground the cutting angle back for ripping yet, still at 30degrees so probably not as smooth a surface as I could get. Stopped during the cut every now and then which left very obvious gouges.
I know the mill needs improvements including handles, more rigid/solid design, better aux oiling and height adjust methods, but I'd love any tips to improve it.
Also the fuel cap on the 076 leaked fuel out of the valve/breather hole when the tank was fullish and saw hot, however only happened when the saw was not running. Is this normal or is the cap buggered?
I'm new to this forum and have already gained an enormous amount of helpful information from it. I've got a 12 acre block with some old timber lying around that we've put on the market and as such I want to get the good timber off before it sells.
As it's very steep and the logs are inaccessible I decided to use a CSM. I bought an 076AV and got a 44" bar and built a cheap CSM after spending a few hours reading the threads in this forum.
The mill as shown in the pic below is just light aluminium and rather dodgy, I'm about to try again and build another one. After about 7 cuts it started to get a bit of movement in the rivet joints and with the 076 on a large log it didn't remain square. I could cross brace it however I think i'll go with steel and weld it. Probably the worst aux oiler you've ever seen (drink bottle with 3m pipe and two inline taps zip tied onto the mill, not hooked up in the pic) but it actually seemed to work ok.
I started with a smaller log and then moved onto the hollow one in the pic. Found that with the flex in the mill and the narrow bars of the mill catching on the log I needed to use the ladder as a guide for every cut. The hollow log was in a perfect sloping spot however the first log had to be moved around to get the clearance and height to mill it. Used a kangaroo/hi lift jack but it was a bit unstable (need to make an attachment like BobL) and stuffed around for ages, complete PITA.
I've got a few logs that are the same size as the hollow one but completely solid and can't wait to get into them but I want to fix the mill first and make sure I do it right. The slabs I got are mostly flat (except a couple of the first ones!) and had good luck as they don't have any rot or termite damage. The chain I'm using is single skip however I haven't ground the cutting angle back for ripping yet, still at 30degrees so probably not as smooth a surface as I could get. Stopped during the cut every now and then which left very obvious gouges.
I know the mill needs improvements including handles, more rigid/solid design, better aux oiling and height adjust methods, but I'd love any tips to improve it.
Also the fuel cap on the 076 leaked fuel out of the valve/breather hole when the tank was fullish and saw hot, however only happened when the saw was not running. Is this normal or is the cap buggered?