Splunk
ArboristSite Lurker
When I was having splitter problems I blocked up a bunch of oak. I used the noodles for the horse stalls instead of buying pine shavings.
i take a pile of my wood noodles laugh: )after they dry and press them in a big steel pipe with a screwpress , making a dense block. I then saturate the block with melted wax and press again. When its cold i knock them out of the pipe, and break it up and bag it, for fire starting.
I use full skip to noodle when using a 36 or 42 inch bar, but at say 24 inches it depends on the saw. Skip maybe a little easier to clear the chips. Best is square ground and rakers a shade under 25 thousands.
I am going to buy my wife a digital camera soon (was supposed to be for Christmas, ooops) and I mean to do a vid of some noodling with it. My DSLR doesn't do video.
I cut a truckload of them in the last two days working a a big madrone.
QUOTE]
Noodle God, why Madrona? I cut the stuff up and it's so hard and brittle, it would seem that they wouldn't noodle at all....is there something special about Madrona noodles that make them more desireable than say, Cedar?
Just wondering.
I cut a truckload of them in the last two days working a a big madrone.
QUOTE]
Noodle God, why Madrona? I cut the stuff up and it's so hard and brittle, it would seem that they wouldn't noodle at all....is there something special about Madrona noodles that make them more desireable than say, Cedar?
Just wondering.
The mountains of noodles I cut are from blocking out the madrone into large turning blanks (up to around 20 by 20 by 14 or so). Blocking out a few thousand lbs of bowl blanks (less than a single trailer load) creates a lot of noodles.
I make bowls and such out of it on my wood lathe. The wood is like skiing powder to cut and turn while it is green. Get hard after it dries.
Here's and example of a bowl in madrone:
This is a great thread. I wish I thought of noodles for the horse paddock and horse bedding. Good ideas never cease from this forum.
I just came in from making some (2 big bags) with my 028 Super .325 Carlton hand filed with round file. Pretty windy though. I got to do a few cuts then gather them up before the return to the wild. The wood is still a little green and gets stuffed in the shoot, so the noodles just poor off the tip.
I personally don't use noodles from the saw for composting, ground cover or anything else when I use regular bar oil. I am going to try some canola oil sometime in part because it makes the noodles more eco friendly.
Then again I generate enormous quantities of curly fries (long shavings) from the lathe and these are 100 percent wood. So I use these for the above things as well as giving truckloads of them away for bedding, weed mulching etc.
The mountains of noodles I cut are from blocking out the madrone into large turning blanks (up to around 20 by 20 by 14 or so). Blocking out a few thousand lbs of bowl blanks (less than a single trailer load) creates a lot of noodles.
I make bowls and such out of it on my wood lathe. The wood is like skiing powder to cut and turn while it is green. Get hard after it dries.
Here's and example of a bowl in madrone:
The only people who don't like skiing powder are those who can't do it. And it's a lot easier than it used to be. That bowl is gorgeous. You selling them? Does the madrone crack in dry climes? PM me, I might be interested in buying one from you. I know better than to try to trade you pinyon noodles...
Oh my...that's beautiful. Takes my breath away. I had no idea you could make something out of Madrona. My sister has madrona flooring, which, she tells me is really hard to get. Lots of difficulties working with the stuff.
Wow. You do beautiful work.
May someday....
I personally don't use noodles from the saw for composting, ground cover or anything else when I use regular bar oil. I am going to try some canola oil sometime in part because it makes the noodles more eco friendly.
Then again I generate enormous quantities of curly fries (long shavings) from the lathe and these are 100 percent wood. So I use these for the above things as well as giving truckloads of them away for bedding, weed mulching etc.
Do these Noodle Gods have an organized religion? Might be my kind of church.
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