Not doing processing till mid October. So will be awhile yet.
I can only give opinion based on my personal situation. I agree, if your not looking to increase production or at the very least reduce the work load, why would any one consider a processor. They are expensive machines to purchase and require good maintenance if you wish them to last. I also agree that folks on this forum are a very good source of knowledge as well as help in ways that can you cant even think of until the right time pops up. For a one man operation, I would think decreasing the workload would be my number one priority, which is what led me toward building my own processor. I had a very good productive wood splitter. With enough people, we could split a cord in less than 30 min. Problem was, I didnt always have a bunch of folks to help me. My job kept me out of town all week so the only time I had to process any wood was on the weekends and most folks with full time jobs now seem to think that weekends are for fishing, camping, going on trips or what ever. Most of the time, my wood was harvested by me whenever I could find it. Brought home and bucked into rounds by me, when I found the time. Splitting was done all in one day the first time I could get some help.Sandhill Crane- The main reasoning for a processor, I would think, for most people is increasing production. That was ours, to a point.
Muddstopper- I really wanted to build as well. I have the shop and welding machine and talent to do so. What is lacking is hydraulic knowledge which could be made up for with arboristsite from very knowledgeable, generous people like yourself. I decided the hours in the build and re-engineering would be better spent splitting/producing/getting past the "operations/learning curve"
That's a damn good size pile for a day but I know for me and probably many other sellers here, there are way too many huge chunks in that pile. If I delivered splits that large I would lose a lot of customers. Not saying you did a bad job just pointing out previously stated concerns about having to resplit when using a processor.Sandhill Crane- The main reasoning for a processor, I would think, for most people is increasing production. That was ours, to a point. Volume is not our main MO though. When we keep quality high, I think we can keep the price higher than it would be otherwise thus profiting the same amount with fewer machinery hours/maintenance. Not everyone wants to pay top dollar for perfect firewood either and we cater, to a point, to those customers as well. We deliver and stack and that eats a ton of time and labor but that also keeps 35 or so (mostly older) customers very happy. (who usually tip as well)
MNGuns- Operating between having splitters and a processor makes it tough. We physically were doing all we could do with the machinery we had and were turning customers away. We wanted to keep prices the same, up production to capture more customers, and not lose any quality which was very difficult. Still looking for a perfect balance.
ValleyFirewood- I still split the odds and ends by hand and the quality is definitely different, to me anyways. We live in totally different markets too. I ASSume you sell, for the most part, to people that depend on firewood to survive. I sell probably half of what we make to people looking to get laid. (We call them "girlfriend fire" customers) Low volume, smaller splits, straight grain, still cheaper than the supermarket or gas station, $20, $50, and $100 increments. When I was looking, I was hoping for a Multitek 16-20SS and found the CRD with low hours and a great price. The circular saw is a luxury for sure. I am definitely making more sawdust but the teeth have had no expense yet. I have a replacement set from the original owner. (~$500? ish?) I have sharpened once or twice just to see if there was a difference. It is a 5/8" diamond burr bit that runs in a burr motor. I freehanded both times and seemed to work great. I have looked at the $580 dewalt mounted sharpener but I see no need. Sidenote: I freehand chainsaw chain with a cordless dremel with a 7/32" diamond burr with excellent results. I can still file too though. Also, the carpet style belt kinda sucks. You have to decrease the angle with really wet conditions and have to thaw it out if it freezes. It needs cleats but it has a gap 2/3 way up for scraps to fall out.
Muddstopper- I really wanted to build as well. I have the shop and welding machine and talent to do so. What is lacking is hydraulic knowledge which could be made up for with arboristsite from very knowledgeable, generous people like yourself. I decided the hours in the build and re-engineering would be better spent splitting/producing/getting past the "operations/learning curve"
Sam-tip- I haven't broken any hoses on the machine. Just all 4 tires though. I think the machine is a little heavier then what the 10k trailer it is mounted to is rated for. I blew a tire right outside Jacksonville and hit a PepBoys right before they closed and then again an hour from home in Waynesburg, PA just before the local stores opened and I found a mom and pop tire shop. I busted another one respositioning it last summer and then the fourth one this past May on the way to a "for-hire" job. I assume its from sitting in the Florida sun. I thought about covering them while it is parked as well. It has 2 mounted spares now. As for the for-hire, I charge $100 hour and $100 to show up (mobilization and demobilization charge, per say). The latest one we processed was 2 tri-axle loads (6-7 cords per) and 2 dozen poles the landowner had harvested himself.
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The owner wanted bigger pieces. The splitter head was high most of the time to get less splits out of the same sized piece of wood. Customer preference. He also sorted out maybe 30 poles under ~8" in diameter and we removed the splitting head and I used a hookeroon to pull them past the splitter head backing plate onto the conveyor. I was sore to say the least. The saw can feed and cut faster then I could spike them and pull them onto the belt and I'm in pretty good shape.That's a damn good size pile for a day but I know for me and probably many other sellers here, there are way too many huge chunks in that pile. If I delivered splits that large I would lose a lot of customers. Not saying you did a bad job just pointing out previously stated concerns about having to resplit when using a processor.
you need to resplit 1/3-1/2 of the processed wood.
That's with your customers and your sized logsFor the most part there is no resplitting. Would be even less if I fixed my 6 way wedge. I broke a wing off it last winter and haven't gotten around to re-welding so it's a 5 way right now.
I work by myself. Have a hired hand stacking in the truck at times, but I feed and run the processor. Takes me about an hour a cord, sometimes closer to 1.5 hrs all depending on how straight the wood is.
Your customers only take popsicle sticks? The splits that come out are perfect sized for 99.999% of my customers. Everything from small 1"x1" kindling to splits that are maybe 6" or so.... I call those the "overnighters". Once in a while a piece that is a bit large passes though, I just resplit it. Cycle time on the splitter is about 5 seconds so it's not like it's a big deal.That's with your customers and your sized logs
6" splits are out of the question for most of my customers. Many of them are weekend burners who like to look at the pretty flames and want the fire to die out quickly so they can go out to dinner and not worry about a fire while they are gone. Also, I get most of my wood from a tree service so these are yard trees that most likely didn't grow straight or have a lot of knots from all of their branches and can range from 6"- 30"+ in diameter. Size does have everything to do with your wood for a processor.Your customers only take popsicle sticks? The splits that come out are perfect sized for 99.999% of my customers. Everything from small 1"x1" kindling to splits that are maybe 6" or so.... I call those the "overnighters". Once in a while a piece that is a bit large passes though, I just resplit it. Cycle time on the splitter is about 5 seconds so it's not like it's a big deal.
The processor can only fit so large a log so it has nothing to do with my wood. It would make the same splits for you too. If I'm making bundles I usually pick out a bit smaller log so I get more of the smaller splits, I try to have 7-9 pieces of wood in a bundle (generous 1 cu ft).
BUTT in any case it's just a matter of talking to the folks at Blockbuster and they will build what you need. 8 way, 10 way, whatever wedge. The processors are built to order for the most part.
6" splits are out of the question for most of my customers. Many of them are weekend burners who like to look at the pretty flames and want the fire to die out quickly so they can go out to dinner and not worry about a fire while they are gone. Also, I get most of my wood from a tree service so these are yard trees that most likely didn't grow straight or have a lot of knots from all of their branches and can range from 6"- 30"+ in diameter. Size does have everything to do with your wood for a processor.
a processor is only taking away the hardest/heaviest splits and you need to resplit 1/3-1/2 of the processed wood. Which is why a kinetic splitter becomes your best friend. We run the wheels off ours. When my sister or cousin is available, they stand at the conveyor and stack big splits into crates and throw the junk into another chemical tote,