EDIT: Changed the name of this thread, to answer more questions on the wood-fired oven...
My favorite things in this forum are:
1. The great advice on chainsaw milling from all of you
2. pictures of milling.
So here are some pictures.
I couldn't take pictures of milling this 6' Alaskan Yellow Cedar butt because it was dark and stormy a few days back when I milled them, but here are some of the finished slabs. I milled them at 4". Maximum width was just shy of 28" which barely squeezed by on my smaller Alaska mill with 36" bar.
Where I milled is underwater in this photo, and this is top of high tide. Pretty nice to have the ocean take your chips away!
The stump had a big sweep to it, and I'm cutting most of the slabs for knees and braces.
This is looking down from my lumber shed on the beach, getting ready to rip the slabs with a jigsaw. Yep, not too fast ripping a curve with a 6" 6TPI blade, but I don't live on the road system, and it would be a heavy haul by boat to get these slabs to a big ship saw (bandsaw).
At the top of the picture are a couple of other yellow cedar logs I'll probably mill up soon. One floated right by my house a few months back! Just over 24" W by 8', clear, and very tight growth rings.
These are the rough 4X4 braces, just under 6' long. I gerry-rigged an airchuck to the jigsaw to keep the sawdust clear.
The 4X4s parallel the grain and feel hecka strong.
And that's a yellow cedar knee, on a yellow cedar log, with a low-hanging yellow cedar branch above. Gotta love yellow cedar!
You'll have to excuse the mess of lines tying up one of the logs...the ocean swell keeps breaking lines on the higher tides, and my answer is to just to tie up a number of sacrificial lines.
And that's it for now...
My favorite things in this forum are:
1. The great advice on chainsaw milling from all of you
2. pictures of milling.
So here are some pictures.
I couldn't take pictures of milling this 6' Alaskan Yellow Cedar butt because it was dark and stormy a few days back when I milled them, but here are some of the finished slabs. I milled them at 4". Maximum width was just shy of 28" which barely squeezed by on my smaller Alaska mill with 36" bar.
Where I milled is underwater in this photo, and this is top of high tide. Pretty nice to have the ocean take your chips away!
The stump had a big sweep to it, and I'm cutting most of the slabs for knees and braces.
This is looking down from my lumber shed on the beach, getting ready to rip the slabs with a jigsaw. Yep, not too fast ripping a curve with a 6" 6TPI blade, but I don't live on the road system, and it would be a heavy haul by boat to get these slabs to a big ship saw (bandsaw).
At the top of the picture are a couple of other yellow cedar logs I'll probably mill up soon. One floated right by my house a few months back! Just over 24" W by 8', clear, and very tight growth rings.
These are the rough 4X4 braces, just under 6' long. I gerry-rigged an airchuck to the jigsaw to keep the sawdust clear.
The 4X4s parallel the grain and feel hecka strong.
And that's a yellow cedar knee, on a yellow cedar log, with a low-hanging yellow cedar branch above. Gotta love yellow cedar!
You'll have to excuse the mess of lines tying up one of the logs...the ocean swell keeps breaking lines on the higher tides, and my answer is to just to tie up a number of sacrificial lines.
And that's it for now...