BackyardlumberATX
ArboristSite Lurker
all hello, first of all i am completely green at this so please be patient, back story is that after having worked for corporate America for a decade and been in an almost head on car accident i now have a new outlook in life, i will be starting two new businesses one that hopefully will give me income to support my family and the other just because it has always intrigued me. I'm a single father of four boys one working on a masters, one Grunt in the Middle East killing bad people and two young ones, i was always very outside type of guy until Corporate America got ahold of me and now I'm trying for dear life to set myself free of those chains.
So here if where i need advice, i have. Echo CS 306 that i purchased refurbished with a 16 bar that i have used only twice in the last two years to cut firewood, upon reading I've found out that the bar is not even for that saw, it does run good but not great, i was given 2 yrs ago one big slab of live oak that was rough cut that is aprox 30 inches wide and about a foot thick and 5 feet long i have that one in my garage, plus three stumps that are about 20 in diameter and a foot thick, two split before i read a had to seal the ends with wax and one is pretty much intact. I was also given about 15 pieces of logs that range from four feet long and 8 inches in diameter to 3 feet long and 12 inches in diameter.
So i will be buying a Stihl 180 that will serve several functions, one as a saw to stop and cut lumber from construction sites and then change of bar and chain so i can use it in a small mill which brings me to what kind of small backyard mill is advised for a smaller backyard. Again this will be an urban operation
Is there a jig or mill to make cookies/slabs out of the logs? Maybe about 2 inches thick and 6 to 12 in in diameter i want to do a hand finish on them and sell them on ebay etc so what kind of bar and chain will work best on my Echo CS 306, i do want both a 12 inch bar with a very good chain for my smaller logs and a 14 in bar to swap out and use on my thicker logs.
Here in Austin Texas there is a lot of road construction and new communities being built so raw material won't be an issue to collect, a lot of pecan, live oak, cedar oak, and definitely a lot of cedar. I'm wanting to corner the smaller sized lumber market with decorative finished stumps, small rustic stump tables, and cookies/slabs made of sliced trunks and smaller sized lumber lengths ,4/4s to 8/4s and the occasional 12/4 in lengths upto 8ft to market to the doit-yourselfers.
Once again any and all advice is greatly appreciated and sorry for the long post.
Happy to be part of this......
Gracias Hermanos
Emilio DeLuna
So here if where i need advice, i have. Echo CS 306 that i purchased refurbished with a 16 bar that i have used only twice in the last two years to cut firewood, upon reading I've found out that the bar is not even for that saw, it does run good but not great, i was given 2 yrs ago one big slab of live oak that was rough cut that is aprox 30 inches wide and about a foot thick and 5 feet long i have that one in my garage, plus three stumps that are about 20 in diameter and a foot thick, two split before i read a had to seal the ends with wax and one is pretty much intact. I was also given about 15 pieces of logs that range from four feet long and 8 inches in diameter to 3 feet long and 12 inches in diameter.
So i will be buying a Stihl 180 that will serve several functions, one as a saw to stop and cut lumber from construction sites and then change of bar and chain so i can use it in a small mill which brings me to what kind of small backyard mill is advised for a smaller backyard. Again this will be an urban operation
Is there a jig or mill to make cookies/slabs out of the logs? Maybe about 2 inches thick and 6 to 12 in in diameter i want to do a hand finish on them and sell them on ebay etc so what kind of bar and chain will work best on my Echo CS 306, i do want both a 12 inch bar with a very good chain for my smaller logs and a 14 in bar to swap out and use on my thicker logs.
Here in Austin Texas there is a lot of road construction and new communities being built so raw material won't be an issue to collect, a lot of pecan, live oak, cedar oak, and definitely a lot of cedar. I'm wanting to corner the smaller sized lumber market with decorative finished stumps, small rustic stump tables, and cookies/slabs made of sliced trunks and smaller sized lumber lengths ,4/4s to 8/4s and the occasional 12/4 in lengths upto 8ft to market to the doit-yourselfers.
Once again any and all advice is greatly appreciated and sorry for the long post.
Happy to be part of this......
Gracias Hermanos
Emilio DeLuna