i like the bags for being able to move wood around. We have about 30 of them filled now. However I don't have a great way (other than dumping them) to unload at a customers house which I suspect will trash the bag. So for now I'm just using them to build bins with. We are aiming for 45 cords to sell next year which is the pile i'm working on now. Currently we're sitting around 10 cords heaped up.Thanks.
Any reason you didn't split straight into those bags? Just easier to fill 'em later with the bucket?
Any splitter pros and cons stand out for you now you've had 20+ hrs on it?
the machine has been pretty good, it's split some nasty pieces, we've also found a few pieces we've just given up on and we'll get them with the hydro machine later. the real ugly stuff is just dangerous to split.
the machine has had some hiccups.
- clutch bolt fell out today. simple matter of tightening it back up
- weve tossed the return springs a few times, I don't want to make them any tighter, it already returns fast enough. we can deal with hooking them up, usually happens around once every 6-8 hours on the machine.
- wood shavings jamming under ram. This one is a bit of a PITA, a few times now we've had the ram get stuck as it rides up and over a sliver of wood. The wood is in the order of 1/8" thick. it will wedge itself ontop of it and not be able to return to starting position. when this happens we have to beat the ram head back with a sledge. usually only a couple of whacks. however we have had 2 that we actually had to un-bolt the carriage wheels and clear the sliver.
- pinion gear and rack show virtually no signs of wear so far. we have run a bunch of nasty stuff through there and it'll pop and grind the gears once in a while, but so far, holding up well.
Things I want to improve on still:
- conveyor for sure. this machine will bury a slow helper if they're not johnny on the spot. this is my most pressing issue at the moment.
- table extension/modification. with two people working the machine we can go at a blistering pace. one handles all splitting. the other clears the table and brings the big chunks back for re-splits. the helper never puts his hands between the ram and the wedge, we simply toss it into the cradle and the operator is in charge of final positioning before splitting. If we're Working with a large round requiring many resplits additional table area is required. for now we have a 30 gallon drum stood on end that we just put next to the cradle opposite the operator. this is where we pile large chunks for resplits. the helper can stack them there safely and then the operator just reaches over and drags it down into the cradle when ready for them
- table grating - I'd like to built a new, bigger table with grating, much like the out-feed area of a Timberwolf to seperate the chips. this will become even more necessary when we get a conveyor going.
- table end. when I get a new or modified table going I'm going to get rid of the lip at the end. right now some pieces like to jump up off that lip, not terribly dangerous, but have seen a few bind there for a millisecond and then pop up
- fourway wedge. i believe this machine is capable of running a 4-way wedge. clearly not every log will pass through, but a good portion of the straight grain stuff should have no problem being put through a 4way. that'll improve speed on a fair amount of the material we handle.