CNYCountry
ArboristSite Operative
OK, we cut two dead elm trees out back, first because they looked like crap, and second because I thought they would make great firewood. Both were 20-22" at the base. I got them down, bucked and limbed but when I went to split them I found out just exactly why people say elm is a bear to split.
I have tried an 8# go-devil and a 12# monster maul and cannot touch them. I got one of the smaller pieces, about 8", to split a kinling sized piece off the side after pounding on it for a few minutes. I am not a small guy.
I gave up in disgust for now, I am not working that hard on something that seems almost impossible.
I'd really like to get these split, there's NO rot and the wood is SO nice and dry, very hard and dense. And heating oil is stupid expensive already. There are a couple of elm logs down from the previous owner of the house and they look good as well. Now I know why he didn't use them.
My father suggested waiting for them to freeze good and hard and trying the monster maul then. I'm not sure I want to wait that long but will if others say it's a good idea.
Another idea is to rent a splitter, I'd rather avoid the cost for just a few trees but I will do it if this is the way to go. It's not that expensive.
Is using wedges worth the effort?
I have heard of people ripping large pieces (15-20") like this with the saw, but it always seemed like a bad idea for some reason. I'm sure my 361 would make short work of it if it was safe. Is this OK to do or am I not seeing the safety issue that the back of my mind is telling me is there?
Thanks for the great advice on this forum. Thanks to you folks I know I made the right choice with the saw purchase. It made short work of these yesterday.
I have tried an 8# go-devil and a 12# monster maul and cannot touch them. I got one of the smaller pieces, about 8", to split a kinling sized piece off the side after pounding on it for a few minutes. I am not a small guy.
I gave up in disgust for now, I am not working that hard on something that seems almost impossible.
I'd really like to get these split, there's NO rot and the wood is SO nice and dry, very hard and dense. And heating oil is stupid expensive already. There are a couple of elm logs down from the previous owner of the house and they look good as well. Now I know why he didn't use them.
My father suggested waiting for them to freeze good and hard and trying the monster maul then. I'm not sure I want to wait that long but will if others say it's a good idea.
Another idea is to rent a splitter, I'd rather avoid the cost for just a few trees but I will do it if this is the way to go. It's not that expensive.
Is using wedges worth the effort?
I have heard of people ripping large pieces (15-20") like this with the saw, but it always seemed like a bad idea for some reason. I'm sure my 361 would make short work of it if it was safe. Is this OK to do or am I not seeing the safety issue that the back of my mind is telling me is there?
Thanks for the great advice on this forum. Thanks to you folks I know I made the right choice with the saw purchase. It made short work of these yesterday.