well, found this splitter setting in an old poll barn, come to find out the guy that owned it hasnt used it in 4 years. i bought it for 75 dollars. i had to rebuild the cylinder,put a new 16 gpm pump on it,new hydro tank and filter system, and rebuild the caberator. i ended up spending more than i had intended, but now i have a splitter that has split every thing that i have fed it.
also had to replace fuel tank and fuel line on the old model 23 briggs. when i say old, i mean old. this is a 1950 8.25 motor and runs great
This is my splitter. It is made by Log Boss, a company which has been making them in my home town of Marble Rock, Iowa since 1979. They are a unique splitter in that the ram diameter is only 1 1\2 inches and yet it has a splitting force of approximately 22 tons. This is accomplished with a patented power booster which will not only cut wood, but will actually cut a piece of red elm of 8-12 inches diameter CROSSWISE. I have no idea of how many cords of wood that this has split, but it is one hell of a lot!!! So oak which I split last year is behind the splitter. These only weigh about 200 lbs., and are pretty easy to put into a pickup. They only cost around $1400, and if anyone wants one they can PM me and I will tell you how to get them. JR
<a href="http://s267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/?action=view¤t=LogBoss002.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/LogBoss002.jpg" border="0" alt="My Log Boss Splitter"></a>
<a href="http://s267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/?action=view¤t=LogBoss003.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/LogBoss003.jpg" border="0" alt="The Power booster"></a>
<a href="http://s267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/?action=view¤t=LogBoss004.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i267.photobucket.com/albums/ii296/jra1100/LogBoss004.jpg" border="0" alt="7 HP engine"></a>
thanks alot splittah, after working on it for 2 weeks, i split every thing i had(about 8 cords) now im looking for another score on wood.
i've found the literature on the log boss, i found their site and i glanced through what few pictures they have, and they are of low quality. yours are great, and i thank you for posting them.
i spent a good portion of my day at work trying to figure out how that booster system functions, i've found a couple of companies that make booster packs but nothing that i can think of that would tie into a splitter cylinder safely.
i've built a couple splitters, so anything new that comes up i'm really interested in, and i love looking at all these pictures. some people are really handy, and others i think don't value their hands.
does anybody know how that booster system works that can explain it to me, and/or who makes something similar that ties into a hydraulic system that is currently existing? i.e. - can i just add one of those booster setups to my existing horizontal and see some gains in the low end without increasing cylinder size or going with a much higher psi pump?
another pict. It is from Canada.
that is TOO cool......:greenchainsaw:interesting thread
Here's the Logrover again, doing large stuff on the deck
A firewood company in my area has a 2 station splitter as in your pic. I stopped in once to get a look at it. I was surprised at it's size. It is more compact than it looks. I didn't measure but seem to be less than 6 foot wide and 10 foot long without the conveyor. The young fellow that I spoke with didn't know much about the splitter but he said it was easy to use and he could split wood all day without getting sore.
They have about 2 or 3 acres of split wood on hand.
They are made by http://www.powersplit.com http://www.timberdevil.com/products.html
I built one based on their design and found it very efficient for one man operation, all loading and splitting is done on the same side of the machine regardless of block size and the split wood stays on the table. No need to pick it up off the ground.
Here is another one. One more after this.