Ash is good wood. Doesn't seem to matter what I stuff this stove with, I get good heat out of it. I can put a couple hunks of silver in it and still have a good bed of coals in the morning.Lotsa good things about silver weeds. Light, dries fast, splits easy when dry, easy to carry in, lights easy, burns hot.
Only bad thing is it doesnt burn long, but depending on what region you're in thats not so bad sometimes. Most of the time during the day I could burn silver maple as a primary feul and use sugar maple over night then switch back to silver in the morning. But I have mostly ash, so I burn ash during the day, then switch to ash at night. Then switch back to ash. Then mix in some ash with the ash and burn more ash.Ash is my spirit tree.
But you won in the end. Onya.Engineers should have to work on the things they design. After about two hours of cussing and beating, I finally got that leaking hose changed. The hose in question goes from the pump, thru the middle of the frame, and connected to a elbow fitting that was mounted outside the frame, right behind the rear wheel. They dont make a wrench that will reach thru all that mess and take off that hose. I had to remove the wheel, remove the oil filter, remove the oil filter base, drag the hose thru the frame where I could get a wrench on it. Now these new hoses have bigger jic fittings than what is originally on the machine. One I got the new hose connected to the oil filter base, I had to feed it back thru the hole in the frame and push it down thru the middle with all the other hoses. Of course that bigger fitting didnt want to fit thru the small hole in the frame, because not only is the fitting a larger wrench size, the crimped part is longer than the old style. This mean unbolting the cable mount that shift the rear end from low range to high range and prying the cable to the side so that dang hose would make the 90* bend to turn straight down. Now mind you, the bottom of the tractor only sets about 6 inches off the ground and I cant get on one knee and work, so here I am laying on my side, trying to reach over and into the frame with one arm, and pushing the hose with the other hand. Worked up a lather, but finally got it done and put back together. Took the splitter to the wood pile and those big pieces I wanted to split where just to big, even with the crane, to set on the beam. I split one little stick, looked at the pile and said to heck with it. Going to have to noodle those rounds one more time. Parked the splitter and tractor back under the shed and climbed in my recliner and took a nap.
He who dies with the most tools, Wins!But you won in the end. Onya.
Fixed it for youEVERYTHING NOW is designed to never have a hose leak. And they don't as long as they stay in the showroom.
The cheap maul knocks it apart but I'd like to try a fiskars axe. Everyone seems to think they're the cats pajamas.
I have an x27 and wish I could use it more but I have to use the isocore on everything I have. The x27 wont split it. Not even close. The last round of "splitting" I did was with a 395xp. Beats any swinger I've used.The Fiskars X-27 is the best hand held splitting device I have ever used. Been splitting wood for over 40 years, and until 3 years ago did not own a splitter. Rented one once, but I would not split the Elm I could not split either! Ended up noodling that with the 044.
I have used traditional 6 & 8 lb with wook & glass handles, and metal Monster Mauls of various configurations (some home made).
There may be some high end stuff I have not tried, but IMO it is the best affordable hand held splitting device, and I have not been able to break it yet!
He who dies with the most tools, Wins!
The most WORKING toys perhaps?He who LIVES with the most toys wins!!!
Hand splitting is a lot of fun when the wood cooperates. Then you have the patience for the odd tough piece. When splitting species where every round it a battle it loses it's enjoyment quickly lol.
Bang on. A nice bit of oak or if I'm ever lucky enough again to get locust,,ooo the joy. A bit of super crotchety wavy grained and wire infested ash, or some wavy grained willow that is springy as cork.....that't the stuff that wore out my patience and sent me to ebay to bid on a bigger saw. Hmm, guess that means this story has a happy ending. I do try wedges and the sledge on some of the hard stuff, but that is never a satisfying experience.