ChoppyChoppy
Tree Freak
I just tip the splitter vertical to handle the big pieces like that. Do noodle the stuff that I'm pretty sure won't split and just jam up on the splitter though.
Noodling Horizontally looks like it wood be inconvenient to Me.
A pallet if you watch where the nails are wood work, or if lifting the rounds on to a full length round is too much, cut a "Short Round 4-10" and put your rounds on that, but to me, noodling Vertically would seem much more Comfortable, regardless of what you space it off the ground with.
Doug
That is one thing I don’t like about the 562 is the clutch cover, jams up with noodles pretty quick.I usually leave an inch or so at the bottom of my noodle cut and just smack it with the fiskars. Those 600 series echoes clear noodle like nobodies business. 590 gets the nod over the 7910 for noodle work here.
And for Doug, maybe they do things differently out in Oregon, but I don't 'noodle' my helpers (especially since they are my own kids) - I noodle my wood.
Hey Stache, it's Your thread titled "Noodling Helpers"
Just making sure the wife was okay with it
Out here in Oregon, noodling helpers would get you in trouble, unless of course, you aren't here legally, then it's all okay, Oregon is a Sanctuary State, we only prosecute American Citizen Criminals here
Doug
I see - good point. One must be careful with their words lest one gets in trouble with them.
Certainly someone from Oregon knows that! My condolences.
My younger brother spent 14 years in Portland. I don't know how he could take it for so long. Pretty town, but the people......
I do not like to noodle.It's hard on the saw,only do it as a last resort.Otherwise the big chunks get nailed by the splitter when it goes vertical.I just tip the splitter vertical to handle the big pieces like that. Do noodle the stuff that I'm pretty sure won't split and just jam up on the splitter though.
I do not like to noodle.It's hard on the saw,only do it as a last resort.Otherwise the big chunks get nailed by the splitter when it goes vertical.
I don't know how you could live in Portland or St Louis. I do my best to stay away from any city with more than 100k people in it. I live where the cows outnumber people.I see - good point. One must be careful with their words lest one gets in trouble with them.
Certainly someone from Oregon knows that! My condolences.
My younger brother spent 14 years in Portland. I don't know how he could take it for so long. Pretty town, but the people......
I do not like to noodle.It's hard on the saw,only do it as a last resort.Otherwise the big chunks get nailed by the splitter when it goes vertical.
I don't know how you could live in Portland or St Louis. I do my best to stay away from any city with more than 100k people in it. I live where the cows outnumber people.
I noodle which ever way the log is laying. If the log is laying vertical, I turn my saw vertical and noodle. The point is to get it small enough to pick up, so I certainly am not going to wrestle it into an ideal position. That is also why I hate vertical splitters. Why wrestle the huge rounds on the ground, when I can noodle it and put it anywhere I want.
How is Noodling Hard on a saw?
Doug
Usually when noodleing the saw is running at or near full throttle all he way through a big chunk of wood.I don't like holding wide open throttle for an extended period of time on any gas engine.My opinion "hard on the saw" YMMV.How is Noodling Hard on a saw?
Doug
Usually when noodleing the saw is running at or near full throttle all he way through a big chunk of wood.I don't like holding wide open throttle for an extended period of time on any gas engine.My opinion "hard on the saw" YMMV.
Usually when noodleing the saw is running at or near full throttle all he way through a big chunk of wood.I don't like holding wide open throttle for an extended period of time on any gas engine.My opinion "hard on the saw" YMMV.
Noodling Horizontally looks like it wood be inconvenient to Me.
A pallet if you watch where the nails are wood work, or if lifting the rounds on to a full length round is too much, cut a "Short Round 4-10" and put your rounds on that, but to me, noodling Vertically would seem much more Comfortable, regardless of what you space it off the ground with.
Doug
It's not. The idea is to make a chunk of wood that you can carry or lift onto the tailgate. Sometimes you need four chunks and when it really gets big, I need six. My log splitter is often 30 miles or more from the job site where I cut the big rounds.Correction: Noodling looks like it would be inconvenient to me.