Nice looking pine there koomie.View attachment 501775 View attachment 501776
Dropped this pine that the wind blew the top out of. Nice and straight and sat up nicely on piles of dry wood that we had sitting there. Thats a 30 inch bar on my 441.
No problem! She is a classic aye@mortalitool hooked me up with this sweet little saw today. Thanks buddy!
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@mortalitool hooked me up with this sweet little saw today. Thanks buddy!
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Cool! I was kinda wondering what happened to the dawg as well. I'm working on another saw of the same make and model and it to is missing the dawg. Hmmmmm.I used one of those when it was new in the late 70's I think. Decent little saw. I don't remember it not having any dawg? Add it to the Mac and the working collection grows.
That pine makes the dolmar look like a kids toy. But we all know they are bad machines for power to weight ratios.View attachment 501790
They are fun to drop in the Far North too. Next felling job is gums about the same DBH but way taller. Drop, mill, season, kiln, run into flooring and decking, and firewood the rest of the trees. Should keep me busy for farking ages. Need something bigger than the dolmar 7900 and 32" bar though. Let a mint husky 2100 slip through my fingers last year. Kicking myself about it now.
Nice.Each ring is approximately 14 inches long. We use a diesel powered splitter.
[photo="medium"]815[/photo]
Dolly is great saw. But the need for something bigger is not going away anytime soon. A pity I haven't enough money yet for a big saw. If I had the money, there's lots of gear I need to buy or make up to complete the big wood harvest and process jigsaw puzzle. One day, I hope. Pine was dropped to the left. Was my first time using a bottle Jack for lift. Pics on my laptop. Will post next time I'm able. Didn't do a perfect job with the cuts though, but should be good for a laugh when you see it. I now use two x 10t bottle jacks and 8t of winch cable pull if I need to persuade some trees off their lean and wedges alone won't do it. Especially the red gums bc the fibres are brittle and I can't seem to swing them with much success. Only once have I managed to get a good amount of swing on one and that took ages and was dicey.That pine makes the dolmar look like a kids toy. But we all know they are bad machines for power to weight ratios.
Looks like you dropped it to the high side into the back of the pasture. Do you have any more pictures of it.
Lots of saws from where I'm from don't have dawgs. I guess when you are only cutting aspen and pine you don't really need them?I used one of those when it was new in the late 70's I think. Decent little saw. I don't remember it not having any dawg? Add it to the Mac and the working collection grows.
Great info.Dolly is great saw. But the need for something bigger is not going away anytime soon. A pity I haven't enough money yet for a big saw. If I had the money, there's lots of gear I need to buy or make up to complete the big wood harvest and process jigsaw puzzle. One day, I hope. Pine was dropped to the left. Was my first time using a bottle Jack for lift. Pics on my laptop. Will post next time I'm able. Didn't do a perfect job with the cuts though, but should be good for a laugh when you see it. I now use two x 10t bottle jacks and 8t of winch cable pull if I need to persuade some trees off their lean and wedges alone won't do it. Especially the red gums bc the fibres are brittle and I can't seem to swing them with much success. Only once have I managed to get a good amount of swing on one and that took ages and was dicey.