+1 on using your log splitter for limbs you can lift up. This works great. No unbalanced pieces falling off the sawbuck.
tuco1963 in the great ohio valley said:hi all
i was wondering what others use to hold theyre skinny logs (ie) limbs while cutting them to length .
my wife useually holds one end over a saw horse but complains about the wood chips getting in her shoes any ideas on what i can use to make this a one man operation?
I work both ends toward the middle so it stays balanced.blel said:No unbalanced pieces falling off the sawbuck.
tuco1963 in the great ohio valley said:my wife useually holds one end over a saw horse...
Nobody should be within 20 feet of you when operating a saw and especially not so close as to get sawdust in the shoes.Backwoods Savage said:If I cut the limbs off, then I like to use a sawbuck and the wife holds.
woodmiser said:tuco1963 in the great ohio valley said:any ideas on what i can use to make this a one man operation?
http://woodchucktool.com/
southbound said:smokinjay said:I just grab anything I can find....
Show off...
WoodNStuff said:I like using a cross buck. Right now, I set the limb on another log, hold it in place with my boot, and cut it. I've also used a tree crotch and another round to essentially make something that works like a cross buck. At the end, I cut and split it up for firewood.
btuser said:I like that woodchuck thing. I made it my wife's screensaver/background (a not-so subtle xmas gift hint!) I could see a use for that with all the smaller saplings I cut down.
Bigger trees I start at the top and work backwards towards the trunk.
CTYank said:No way am I going to cut "skinny logs" to length in the woods. I cut them down to 6-7 feet so they fit on the p/u, and haul them home.
At home, cheapie HF 10" table saw cuts them to length really quickly, turning min amount of wood into dust/chips. Effective buzz-saw for small stuff.
Chainsawing small stuff can get a bit "sporty."
tuco1963 in the great ohio valley said:hi all
i was wondering what others use to hold theyre skinny logs (ie) limbs while cutting them to length .
my wife useually holds one end over a saw horse but complains about the wood chips getting in her shoes any ideas on what i can use to make this a one man operation?
tuco1963 in the great ohio valley said:hi all
ok im game anybody ever use the wood chuck tool it does look neat but is it practical :-/
heatit said:I have used a method seen by many tree service guys; they just cut partly through the log all the way down the length at each mark, then just roll it over and complete each cut; seems very fast and with practice, you don't hit the ground and dull the chain.
NATE379 said:The ground and my left foot.
Dave I'm talking about the easy to lift small diameter stuff say 4" and smaller, not log logs.Most of us cut the rounds where the tree falls, sometimes hard to get the splitter out there.
Other reason, I can’t lift the logs. Getting old I guess.
Heck , I have to roll some of the rounds onto & off the trailer. (well don’t “have to†just want to walk the next day) smile
heatit said:I have used a method seen by many tree service guys; they just cut partly through the log all the way down the length at each mark, then just roll it over and complete each cut; seems very fast and with practice, you don't hit the ground and dull the chain.
MrWhoopee said:This is the way I've been doing it. After I roll the log, I stab the bar into the existing cut and pull up. Ensures the cuts connect cleanly and you don't ground the bar.
MrWhoopee said:"what holds your wood while bucking?"
Heidi ;-P
Three pages of responses, do I have to do all the dirty work?
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