I'm pretty sure the are grade 5.Did you have hardened bolts in the ram or soft bolts? This is why I have soft in mine........bolts are cheap to replace and break before something else is damaged.
I think you got by pretty good considering the length of time it actually lasted. I will suggest on the rebuild that you make the slide a little longer and maybe top plate the top flange with a little extra metal for insurance and it should last another 30years, or longer.The flange is 3/8. iirc the slide is 8 inches long. My piece got all cockeyed and was pushing on the top of my ram.. The front bolts broke from the pressure.. Once they popped it was to late.. I'm not complaining.. I first built this splitter in 1984..
Sure now you tell us, I could have used that. I bet it weighs way more than 2000lbs. My beam is 12x12 about half inch if memory serves and it's over 400 lbs at 6 ft length.I have a nice H beam for you, it's ~16x16" 1" thick, about 12ft long. Probably weighs 2000lbs!
Sure now you tell us, I could have used that. I bet it weighs way more than 2000lbs. My beam is 12x12 about half inch if memory serves and it's over 400 lbs at 6 ft length.
I know the feeling of dealing with the broken top flange.It happened to me 2 months ago.The beam ,although being approximately 12"x 5",had some issues.When I initially built the splitter 5 years ago the steel cut and welded strangely.I have split 4-500 cord through it since then with a 6" long push plate.Too short.The keeper plates under the flange were continually bending along with bending the 1/2" bolts.The beam flange developed stress cracks where the flange met the vertical web.I welded those up but eventually it was unrepairable.I cut the flange where it met the top of the web and welded in a piece of 5/8"plate the width of the original flange.The new piece starts an inch from the base of the wedge and stops behind the rear end of the pushplate in the retracted position.4 hour,short money fix.I don't guess I'll ever learn.. I had a 24 inch chunk of oak I have been ignoring.. It was a big ole crotch.. I wish now I had just noodled it.. Lol
Hind sight is always 20/20.. I tried from both ends 4-5 times to split it and it wouldn't budge.. Finally I found a weak spot and poured the coal to it.. I guess I won the battle but it won the war.. Oh well off to the steel yard for some new iron..
My dad's Lickety Splitter had one. Seems like a good thing to have.
Good to know. I haven't seen it in years, I just remembered the strap.That strap serves more than one purpose on a Lickity Splitter.
It has an open tube that slides onto a stationary o ringed end plate.
Take the strap off and both cylinders pull apart by hand.
Not a normal built cylinder.
When I read the title I'm surprised fiddy hasn't put any snackie pics in here yet.