Scrounging Firewood (and other stuff)

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I am deciding between the Tecomec Evo chain grinder and the Oregon 410. I know this has been in this thread before but I can't find it. Anyone who owns one have any input?
EVO has a sliding vise, which works better with the ‘Square Jig’, if that’s of interest.

I like the Tecomec ’Compact’ (really full sized) grinder in that price range. Full amperage motor, and controls are easier to reach.
IMG_6145.jpeg

Philbert
 
Do you need the money right now or not? Can you afford to build a home on spec for that price? Can you afford to sit on the home for a few years if the interest rates go up while paying HOA fees if there are some, taxes, upkeep on the home etc? How about building costs? Lumber and other building commodities skyrocketed during Covid raising building costs to the point contractors raised their price to finish or just paid out a non completion penalty as it was less than the material inflation costs and walked off. Can you afford to dump $100k into a house then be left scrambling for someone else to complete it at the new materials cost? Lot's of people do it but only you can decide if you can afford it. Budget it out and include the average sale time of the homes in the community with what it would cost you to keep the home that long plus a buffer in worst case scenario. Building a spec house is a good way to make money but most of the guys I know doing it are contractors themselves so are doing it for cost and can sell cheaper for the same profit others do plus the cash flow to sit on it if they have to.
Say the average time on the market in your community is 2 years and the selling price has to be discounted for the property to move. Average lowering price is $25,000 before sale. It costs you $15,000 a year in taxes, maintenance etc. That $200,000 home you put on the market for $300k just required you to drop it to $275k to move it. $30k plus 6% brokerage fee to sell is $46,500 plus other nonsense so say $47,500. You sat on a house for 2 yrs and made $25,000 which is a good profit but what is the red hot real estate market doing in 2 years? Will your house sell quickly or will you have to wait 3 or more years? Will house prices drop to keep them moving? Did you have to borrow equity in your home or from a 401k to get the deal done? What if another emergency pops up and now you don't have the equity in anything to pay for it? What if your cash flow from your job stops because you broke your leg and can't work for 2 months. Do you have an emergency fund to draw on to keep the bills paid? Don't believe a real estate broker on any of this, they will paint you a happy picture to get your listing.

You only said you paid "a song and a dance" for the lot. If you paid $8,000 for it and sold it for $16,000 that's a 100% profit. Not good enough? It would be for me and I'd take the $16,000, look around and do it again and again and again. Pretty soon your buying $100k property cash and selling for $150 or $200 without risk as you pulled your original $8,000 out long ago, allocated 5 or 10% of the profit to yourself as a "salary" and are now playing with other peoples money. If you lose everything then you still have a nice profit plus your original money in the bank.
Paid less than $1,000 and Zillow shows lots in there going for 8-10
 
Thought you guys might enjoy this, had a juvenile eagle on the back of the pond project eating the woodchuck that the boy shot last week, proud of him 👍. This is the same location I shot the coyote last yr, we put the woodchuck out there to see if we could get another yote to stop by.
View attachment downloaded638771056553776121.mp4
The eagle had some of the locals a bit confused as they wanted to walk thru, but no access was given.
View attachment downloaded638768808906738659.mp4
This guy was out there a couple days later.
At least that's when we got him on the camera, I watched a turkey vulture on the woodchuck yesterday for 10min and the camera never took one picture/video.
View attachment downloaded638771050973765349.mp4
Had these critters out there last night, a deer walked thru between these two pics.
Screenshot_20250309_081503.jpg
Screenshot_20250309_081510.jpg
 
I haven't even used my chain vise yet :oops:. Need to get it out of the basement and into the barn. Sure it makes hand filing a pleasure.
Can’t wait to see ur shop setup, gonna be great, get those square grinders going,👍the end feature clamp makes square filing much easier,all the chain out of the way except the tooth ur filing ,
 
Cut us some fence line junk today.
IMG_3249.jpeg

Lots of low btu stuff in here but it burns better than snowballs so it’ll get run through the boiler !!
IMG_3248.jpeg

Lots of leaners. The MS200 saw a lot of run time today. Sure do enjoy this little beast.
IMG_3250.jpeg

Not sure if this technique has an actual name but it works great on leaners. Make your face cut, bore in and work back. Prevents barber chairs quite well. I was a bit skinny on the face cut on this one but it popped right off once severed.
IMG_3251.jpeg
 
Back
Top