Nice thread !
I come home with cuts and bruises all the time and when the wife asks how I got each one I rarely even know myself.Slowly but surely. It's been darn humid the past week again and I can't stand working in the humidity.
Don't ya hate it when ya cut yourself and don't know how or when it happened?
Found a piece of shagbark that gave the super split a work out. Each pic is after a hit. There was a branch on the other side of this as well. Decent grain going everywhere but straight.
Got a decent trailer load cut and split this morning. Leaving in a bit to pick up the boy from band camp and watch what they've been working on all week. Then maybe another trailer load this afternoon.
Sent from a field
What happened? The design looks good. BUT, maybe the upward slope of the ramp worked against you?Well, that didn't work.
Sent from a field
Hope you don't have a well around the house!Most yellow jackets dig their nest in the ground and attack buried wood, rotting away. Thousands of them occupy one nest. They usually have a 1" diameter hole that they use to enter and exit their abode.
To kill them all, wait until dusk and pour a gallon of waste oil or creosote into the hole and cover it with a flat stone that weighs about ten to twenty pounds. Leave it there four three to four days. The flying soldiers of the colony will try to get back in, but they will eventually give up.
You will win and they will lose.
I like the soap and water method. It seems to work pretty well without additional issues. That's why I posted it. Hopefully more and more people will try it.Hope you don't have a well around the house!
This works until it's time to remove the logs from ten feet up at the top of the dome and fill a truckload for a customer. I tried it about three years ago. Also, the snakes, rats, and about everything else love to get inside. So, I gave up on it. I even tried spiraling around from a solid center. That failed also.Started the holz hausen tonight.
Sent from a field
Well, the way your stack was going up, after it got to about 5' high, you could have held a boxing match inside and made millions. Wait a minute; nobody sitting down could have seen the fighters.Wife talked me out of it anyway. We re stacked the wood yesterday.
Slope was OK. But the splits wanted to turn sideways moving up and eventually there was enough weight on it that the splitter wanted to move it rather than the wood.
I tried angling the side pieces to help funnel the splits into a single/double file configuration, but then they just jammed up at the end.
If I attached it to the splitter, it would likely solve the problem. But then I wouldn't have the mobility I need.
A ratchet straps around the legs of both the ramp and the SS would be a quick fix. I like your idea and I have an SS and some similar material in the shop. Hmmmm.