If you’re ever looking for good wood splitting wedges buy two of these and enjoy the experience. Amazing.
Worth the money!
Worth the money!
are you cutting for next year already?.
I’m just glad you’re wearing a hard hat to protect all that intelligence in the event a several thousand pound tree lands on you. You may as well start taking chances and cut more recklessly knowing you’re 100% protected………
Trust me, these wedges are fantastic.
I’ve had a crash course in splitting huge rounds in order to haul them to the splitter.
Trees get big here. This one was over 100 yrs old.
The wedges are for getting the monstrous rounds split into two for hauling up they hill to my Super SplitOofda, that wedge looks like a lot of work! We have been heating our new house and our domestic hot water now for 2 years with an outdoor wood boiler. That thing burns anything 25% or less. In fact the Manufacturer recommends 25% to be about as dry as you go. I'm in the process of building a badass firewood splitter. It's gonna have an autocycle valve for the push ram an adjustable wedge with a log lift for the big rounds.
Lots of dead branches (widow makers) that can come down when you hammer in felling wedges. A big branch will kill you but why not limit damage of small ones or a glancing blow?I’m just glad you’re wearing a hard hat to protect all that intelligence in the event a several thousand pound tree lands on you. You may as well start taking chances and cut more recklessly knowing you’re 100% protected………
ash will burn green but watch your chimney. grew up burning green ash and it does creosote your chimney bad.It’s green ash… running 20-25% moisture the day it’s felled.
It’ll be my first full winter burning wood this year.
Family stuff got in my way - I was gonna get everything felled / bucked / split by July.
I have a moisture probe and, although I don’t think I’ll need it this season, no reason I can’t burn if it falls below 20% by the time my seasoned stash runs out.
Those Super Splits are pretty slick. I've never run one myself but they look like they would be awesome in good clean wood. Ever run anything really knotty or stringy through one? If so, how does it do? I've seen some videos online of those things in use and I love the speed of them.The wedges are for getting the monstrous rounds split into two for hauling up they hill to my Super Split
Some of these rounds are big (>24') but not cottonwood. My stove needs 18" logs.Those Super Splits are pretty slick. I've never run one myself but they look like they would be awesome in good clean wood. Ever run anything really knotty or stringy through one? If so, how does it do? I've seen some videos online of those things in use and I love the speed of them.
I'm building my big ol splitter like I am because I don't need to go small with my splits. Basically if it fits through the door of the boiler and it's not too heavy to lift, it goes through in. I have some cottonwood logs though that are like 36" across which is why I'll be putting a log lift on my splitter before it's completed.
Galwhostackswhileguysplits is a stack nazi.You're stacking that stuff way to nice. You can split logs faster if you just toss it in a messy pile.
Right?...@guywhofishes , Nice looking wood shed. Any cats around to keep the mice under control. Them little bastards sure love to burrow into the wood piles.