For personal burning, extravagant equipment isn't remotely necessary.
A sled would do me fine. A wheel barrow if it's dry and your trips aren't too far.
I like to think of the labor part as the "payment" for the free heat. It' not free if you buy tons of equiptment. Either way you pay for it.
That's not how this site works.For personal burning, extravagant equipment isn't remotely necessary.
A sled would do me fine. A wheel barrow if it's dry and your trips aren't too far.
That's cool! I can do that in one day with the supersplit!For personal burning I'd turn up the electric before I'd spend a dime on buying wood.
About a month ago I split ten cord in less than two weeks with a Fiskars. Toughen up you Sally's.
That's cool! I can do that in one day with the supersplit!
That's a huge day. I'm not sure a mother with a newborn is going to be too happy about daddy spending from sunrise to sunset (which is what it'll take me with my SS to get anywhere near 40m3) doing fiirewood, or taking the rest of the week off to recover. I didn't get close to 40m3 on my best full day working from stacks of rounds and needed a few days off to recover. I must be too soft or have poor workflow or both.That's cool! I can do that in one day with the supersplit!
That's achievable, but is at the upper limits for me and not sustainable all day every day. Don't get me wrong, 8hr days are short ones in Summer, but allowing for breaks, gear tweaks, functioning on a human level with all the distractions, alternative things to get through or enjoy in a regular day, 10hrs of runtime on the splitter in a day has to be the exception, surely?A cord an hour is pretty typical amongst SS owners I've talked to.
That's not how this site works.
Before the Op knows it, there'll be saws multiplying in the garage, firewood processor and tractor catalogues piling up on the kitchen table, etc, etc, etc.