(07-02-2019, 05:59 AM)ianab Wrote: Yup. when you can pump ~100 odd HP into a big circle saw it's a whole different level.
But that's hard to justify for a "hobby". A ~13hp sawmill like John and I have costs less than a decent boat to go fishing in.
I tell my buddy I've sawed more boards then he's caught fish
Too true Ian. I sawed what must be the equivalent of about 50 fish yesterday. Three mostly nice ash logs yielding about 310 bf. I cut the first two in the typical way of making a cant and then plain sawing that, rotating as necessary to get the clearest wood. Pretty easy. Most of the boards were 7 - 12" wide. The last log however, was the biggest and clearest looking on the outside, so I decided to try quasi quarter sawing it similar to this
Woodmizer method. I had help which made it easier, because we had to take the first side off the mill then put it back on after cutting the rest. After removing the one side I was able to cut two full width cuts around the center, then rotate the remaining side up vertically and saw it into rift and QS boards. I did the same with the side we had to put back on. Many of those boards had bark on one edge so they got put back on the mill to get removed. The two full width center boards had to go back on, too, to cut out the center pith section in each. So you are making a lot more cuts and the boards are more random and narrower in width (about 4 - 7" for this log) but the linear grain of rift and QS ash is very nice IMO. And of course it's more stable, too. Here's a photo of some of those rift/QS boards:
The pile of logs has dwindled to two, and the slab wood pile is growing:
A guy I milled some slabs for last Fall stopped by to look at the mill and then we went to walk a piece of property he and his brothers own only a mile from my house that they are developing into housing lots. There were several very nice walnut trees and some others I had no clue about but had nice clear trunks at least 25 feet long. Lots of poison ivy to avoid, too. They have 9 acres more we didn't even look at. We haven't struck a deal yet on when the trees will come down to be cut, or who gets how much, but I joked that if we cut all those trees into lumber I'll need to get a hydraulic mill to do it all. An LT-35 hydraulic unit is "only" about $25K. Who knows?
John