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It is currently Fri Apr 19, 2024 6:37 pm
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Looks like meat is back on the menu boys
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NWGunner
Site Supporter
Location: South Seattle Joined: Thu May 2, 2013 Posts: 12475
Real Name: Steve
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PMB wrote: cmica wrote: usrifle wrote: PMB? You are the man! I envy you being able to do that, both having the equipment and the Wood available to do that. I never thought i would say this to another Man, but can i have some of your Wood? Strike that, you need to be PAID for your Wood my friend, it's beautiful. X2 You're welcome to some. Chris, you have not been by to visit in too long. Stop by. Another nice offer...not surprised.... As far as the tension you mentioned, and it inhibiting you cutting...we had the same problem....had to dial down the size of the logs. Brings back memories....mostly good...but I remember the soreness, too
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Mon Aug 20, 2018 10:12 pm |
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Guntrader
In Memoriam
Location: Mukilteoish Joined: Sat Mar 26, 2011 Posts: 11595
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jukk0u wrote: Nice vids.
Yep, sensitivity to wood dust comes on fast... one day you're cruising along thinking... man, I love smelling this stuff as I work then BAM! Blinding headache from a mere sniff of dust. No kidding. Bought a TV from a buddy who recently refinished the wood in in his house (sanding). Eyes were burning and I had a funky smell in my nose for a couple months from inhaling the wood dust emitting from that thing. Back when I worked on PC's, I would take them outside and plug my nose when I blew the dust out with canned air. Else you would be smelling that shit for weeks. Read a while back that the majority of house dust is flaked off dead human skin, so that grossed me out even more.
_________________ NRA Endowment Member. How did they know my member was well endowed?
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Mon Aug 20, 2018 10:12 pm |
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PMB
In Memoriam
Joined: Wed Mar 6, 2013 Posts: 12018
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NWGunner wrote: As far as the tension you mentioned, and it inhibiting you cutting...we had the same problem....had to dial down the size of the logs. That isn't the way that my brain works. Mine says "Build bigger mill, so you can mill bigger logs!" I envy the folks who are more practical and have common sense. NWGunner wrote: Brings back memories....mostly good...but I remember the soreness, too That's the truth. When you're between 16 and 40ish, can work from dark to dark for several days or longer, and go to sleep with a GOOD feeling sore. It's not such a good feeling anymore. Muscle sore = Good. Bone sore = Bad.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 6:57 am |
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StatlerandWaldorf
Site Supporter
Location: Olympia, WA Joined: Tue Jun 14, 2011 Posts: 3836
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Awesome and jealous!
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 7:58 am |
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delliottg
Site Supporter
Location: Duvall Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2011 Posts: 4604
Real Name: David
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Just an update on the truck. It's in the shop for a few days, looks like my front right hub is mostly toast, the vacuum system in both hubs is toast (it has vacuum lockers so you can put it into 4x4 from the cab), it needs brakes done, and after they rebuild the hub(s) I think it has to be aligned. However, it'll be safe to drive again shortly.
_________________David Unique Treen
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 8:26 am |
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WaJim
In Memoriam
Location: Tacoma Wa Joined: Tue Oct 8, 2013 Posts: 16607
Real Name: George Bailey
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delliottg wrote: Just an update on the truck. It's in the shop for a few days, looks like my front right hub is mostly toast, the vacuum system in both hubs is toast (it has vacuum lockers so you can put it into 4x4 from the cab), it needs brakes done, and after they rebuild the hub(s) I think it has to be aligned. However, it'll be safe to drive again shortly. Never seen a set of those vacuum hubs work after 40.000 miles. road salt kills them. do yourself a favor and throw a set of manual hubs in it. Some of the trucks came with both.
_________________ "Remove one freedom per generation and soon you will have no freedom and no one would have noticed."......Carl Marx
"Let us Cross the river and sit in the shade of the trees" .....Stonewall Jackson
T. Jefferson "....the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants. it is it's natural manure"
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 8:35 am |
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delliottg
Site Supporter
Location: Duvall Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2011 Posts: 4604
Real Name: David
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WaJim wrote: delliottg wrote: Just an update on the truck. It's in the shop for a few days, looks like my front right hub is mostly toast, the vacuum system in both hubs is toast (it has vacuum lockers so you can put it into 4x4 from the cab), it needs brakes done, and after they rebuild the hub(s) I think it has to be aligned. However, it'll be safe to drive again shortly. Never seen a set of those vacuum hubs work after 40.000 miles. road salt kills them. do yourself a favor and throw a set of manual hubs in it. Some of the trucks came with both. Yep, mine has both, but the right one had gotten so stiff that my arthritic hands couldn't turn it any more (left one, no problem). One of my machinist friends at work made me a "wrench" out of Delrin that works perfectly except it was too smooth, so he knurled it, still not enough grip, so I had him drill & tap for a bolt perpendicular to the main body. That did it. Eventually I'll turn a nice handle for the bolt to dress it up a bit, but it's currently completely functional.
_________________David Unique Treen
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 8:45 am |
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Old Growth
Site Supporter
Location: Nisqually Valley Joined: Wed Oct 5, 2016 Posts: 4834
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These are some old firs we milled. Over 4.5 feet wide and 15 feet long. Straight as an arrow.
One of the hardest parts is getting the log from the forest to the mill without beating it up. A 10,000 lb log is tough to keep blemish free with heavy equipment.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 10:11 am |
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Old Growth
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Location: Nisqually Valley Joined: Wed Oct 5, 2016 Posts: 4834
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I enjoy meeting the creative folks that will take my product and turn it into a beautiful masterpiece that will be enjoyed by many people.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 10:16 am |
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Old Growth
Site Supporter
Location: Nisqually Valley Joined: Wed Oct 5, 2016 Posts: 4834
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Every piece/species of wood has its own individual beauty.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 10:19 am |
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Old Growth
Site Supporter
Location: Nisqually Valley Joined: Wed Oct 5, 2016 Posts: 4834
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Some randoms. Maybe one of these nights Ill start a thread for log/timber/sawmill and logging stuff. I have to resize and load allot of my pics to the PC.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 10:30 am |
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RENCORP
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Location: East of Japan, not by much. Joined: Fri Jun 3, 2011 Posts: 12990
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PMB wrote: RENCORP wrote: My flattening sled for chainsaw free cut slabs from old growth long butt cedar downed in the early 1900's by hand loggers was six feet by twelve feet, all angle iron and 2x12's for the bed. Ah, you're the only other person I've found who uses steel for the flattening sled. I use Unistrut of course, but same idea. I placed a wooden bumper so as to not touch the router bit to it. RENCORP wrote: Carriage rode on aluminum wheels on 1x1 inch angle iron set point up as a self shedding track. Chain and hand wheel for dancing end to end on the table, and a gear reduction power feed with forward and reverse for traversing the table side to side. Vertical travel was also hand crank and lock. Power head was a 220 volt 5 hp motor swinging a tool head that mounted 6 carbon steel blades that could be replaced in sets to keep sharp steel on the wood - each cut was 6 inches wide. Holy Shugar. That was fancy and must have been high production. How big around was the cutter? RENCORP wrote: My biggest hand cut slabs were clear red cedar, 54 inches wide from a long butt that was half rotted into the forest floor. We used a Gilchrist log jack to pry it up, and I free cut 6-8 inch slabs out of it from top to bottom. Wish I had kept one - that stuff was dark milk chocolate in color, and you needed to use a magnifying glass to count rings, they were so tight together. My biggest is 52". What did people use 6" to 8" thick slabs for? I have made benches and tables 6" thick, but have only given them as gifts, not sold them. I ask because I am completely bushed from working in the heat and smoke today, not sure that I want to put more labor into a few cants. haha I cheated - bought the sled from an old guy who was a good machinist, and a better welder. Cutter head was 6 inches in diameter. The reason why I was cutting 6-8 inch thick slabs to begin with was to make sure I ended up with 4-6 inch thick slabs after running them through the flattening sled. Also, when it came to the traditional boat builders I cut for, and yellow cedar, they wanted big dimension cants and slabs for fabricating ribs, knees, and the other architecture of a wooden hulled sea craft. Free cutting slabs by hand with a chain saw is not an exact science. Also, by taking a slab after all the handling, moving, loading and unloading, then truing up both sides, I would be able to run the Alaska mill on the thickest ones under 32 inches wide to split them and book match them to make really wide mirror image table tops. It was really nice to finish those up by just taking a skosh off the top from a freshly milled cut. And, you were guaranteed a pristine surface for the tops with no handling marks, gouges, etc. as long as you were careful from that point forward.
_________________ Give a man a fish, and he will eat for a day. Give a man a fishing pole, and he will drink too much beer, get tangled in fish line, hook himself in the nose casting, fall overboard, and either drown, or, go home hungry and wet. Give a man a case of dynamite, and he will feed the whole town for a year!
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 10:31 am |
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PMB
In Memoriam
Joined: Wed Mar 6, 2013 Posts: 12018
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Old Growth wrote: I enjoy meeting the creative folks that will take my product and turn it into a beautiful masterpiece that will be enjoyed by many people. To me, the best part is opening up a rather ugly log and seeing the masterpiece inside. Like that one you showed with the blue stain fungus. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_stain_fungiGoogle for "Blue stain fungi" images. The Dread Princess does the selling. I hate selling. My inclination is to give it all away. Which is ok, but then I get lots of bruises on my ass from the ongoing Dread Princess Educational Series. Sometimes she misses my ass, and those days really suck. During the lean milling years following the 2007 banking wake-up call, I made dozens or a few hundred thick benches, tables, bar tops, conference room tables, counter tops. It's not just the women that love thick wood.
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 11:47 am |
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dennydp
Site Supporter
Location: Bremerton Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2014 Posts: 1618
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Some beautiful slabs,wish I had some talent!
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 2:02 pm |
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cmica
Site Supporter
Location: I-5 /512 Joined: Thu Dec 8, 2011 Posts: 15231
Real Name: chris
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jukk0u wrote: Yep, sensitivity to wood dust comes on fast... one day you're cruising along thinking... man, I love smelling this stuff as I work then BAM! Blinding headache from a mere sniff of dust. . Mike gonna be a little more waiting...just a busy bee nice pic old growth
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Tue Aug 21, 2018 4:39 pm |
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