Thanks for posting this photo Harry.
I recall a thread on it a few years back and was dreading having to search for it. I remember liking the fold-up feature of it, even if that was not originally intended - gives it a little portability. I also recall suggesting that if the steel at each station was welded as an 'H', instead of as a 'U', the wood would be supported up off of the base runners and you would not cut into them at all.
(P.S. - I suggested that Zogger place swing-out 'J' hooks on the side of his firewood trailer to do the same thing).
Philbert
--weird, I have no recollection of that (not saying you didn't do it, I just don't remember right at this time). and I have only been here a year, not years, and use a cargo box on the 3 point hitch, not a trailer, so.... now I do remember you forwarding a link to a truck trailer hitch attachment that held a branch in place up off the ground, similar in theory to the bailey's tool.
Either way, swinging J hooks are interesting as well.
I thought about building a conventional set of Xs sawbuck that fit on top of the cargo box, but decided against building one, just more clunky weight and a big "thing" I don't want to travel with me all the time.
*Usually* I have no probs with branches as I don't immediately just whack all of them off the tree. Starting at the top and working your way back, the tree itself holds them in place. Now really large big branches that go way up high, sure, I drop those to the ground, but they are so large they are like trees themselves, so the same thing, start at the tops and cut my way down to the base.
I guess professional volume cutters (a lot of them) just walk down the trunk and take them off, necessitating some way to do mass quantities of goofy branches. Of course most I think are just left in piles in the woods, I have seen a lot of that over the years. "Slash piles". Sometimes just left, sometimes bulldozed into a big pile of green wood, doused with diesel, set on fire, then the dudes leave, three days later still a smoky pile of mostly unburnt stuff. Seen that a lot as well.
Small saplings I do by what I can reach. Go up, trim what I can, that high, hit a 90 degree turn and cut my rounds off right down to the base. (not many obviously, but I am talking 3-4 inch at the base stuff, so I get 4-5 rounds from it). the left over top is small for even me so they get toted to some area that has runoff issues and used for erosion control. Larger than that I fell normally and cut from the top normally.
edit: Philbert's brain FTW! He is too modest, he remembered and I didn't.
I claim a SENIOR MOMENT! hahahahaha!