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Picking a new chainsaw?

Another long bar video. I’ve learned a lot from this guy.



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That dude knows how to run a saw! Pretty funny too.
 
My yard at the house is around half acre. about 5 years ago, decided to buy my first electric mower. Went with EGO. Bought a mower and a blower. I was so impressed, I got the combo weedeater/edger, and the chainsaw.
First electric chainsaw i've owned, and it works as good or better than the 5 different gas chainsaws I've used over the years. I always bought the cheapo gas ones, usually would get a few years out of them before they would start leaking or get hard to start. I've been very pleased with the electric ego one, and the other bonus is, my wife started helping with the yardwork again.
 
That dude knows how to run a saw! Pretty funny too.
He's one of my favorite channels. He's like a Bob Ross/Grant Woods/Chevy Chase kind of character all wrapped up into one.

I also like watching that In The Woodyard channel on youtube. These guys do a really good job of teaching about all things wood, saws, splitters, trees, logging, etc.

Seems like all the tools are about quality, usability, and cycle time. I caught a video on instagram where someone did cutting times on four different saws. They were all to cut through the same 12" thick log. Here's how they performed, and this isn't perfect, but you'll get the idea:

$300 saw: 27 seconds
$700 saw: 21 seconds
$1500 saw: 10 seconds
$3200 saw: 5 seconds

The In The Woodyard guy did the same thing education on wood splitters. He said the "ton" rating on a log splitter is absolutely useless. What matters is:

*Can it get through?
*How fast is the cycle time?

The rest matters, but those are the performance stats. I've seen some painfully slow bargain splitters.
 
^^^ I own a painfully slow marginal splitter. Takes a lot of beer to get much split!
 
Those guys who do a lot of sawing are tough. Not bending over is nice but my grip strength has gotten pretty sad with too many years behind the keyboard - I get tired forearms and shoulders pretty quick holding the heavier saws. I bet with a lot more use that would get better..
 
^^^ I own a painfully slow marginal splitter. Takes a lot of beer to get much split!
If I ever owned a splitter, I'd probably get a small and slow one too. I'd love one of those $4000 kinetic splitters, but I'd be done splitting wood for the year in 45 minutes.

 
My parents own a decent splitter. I have told myself I need the exercise of splitting with a maul so I dont ever borrow it. What really happens is winter comes and I dont have any wood prepped so i make a call and have it delivered haha!
 
 

I’m almost lost a finger last weekend in that kind of splitter. We were finishing up my pile of recreational red pine, and I was grabbing pieces off the splitter so the other guy didn’t have to go the full cycle. That gap between the back of the wedge and the bolt that holds it on the rod got a piece of me.

I checked out the Stihl 462 today. I don’t know if I’ve got the bearings to work with that all day. Now leaning towards the 362. You wouldn’t think one pound is a big deal, but it feels like it.


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Weight does matter. All day adds up!
 
(Be prepared for a severely over-thought post on the makings of a wood pile.)

If you’ve stuck this thread out this far, maybe u wanna see my rec red pine pile. This is actually about 3/4 red pine, 1/4 balsam fir, and a little bit of jack pine.

I ran the order of operations so it was all mixed together. That balsam fir makes a nice smelling fire, burns bright, fast, and makes great fire starter. I’ve had that soaked in rain an hour earlier, split it down to kindling, and it fired right up.

Ok, this is a spec design at stacking. I don’t think I’ll do it again, but here it is. I put some bracing under the pallets to hold up those 1x6 for ends as opposed to stacking. 4 corners cost me about $22. They were straining by the time I was done.

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Then I stacked outer rows inside those 1x6 braced sides. I can get brand new pallets at work, as many as I can fit in the suburu. So I think I’m gonna opt for a bigger ground base and just make a no-stack pile, or stack smaller outer rows maybe just up a couple feet and then throw it high inside.

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When I was done, I rearranged the last of the pieces to finish sculpting the crown and knocked down the pointy edges to get ready for covering and save on canvas wear.

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Had a little trouble with the ends pushing out, but I corrected as I went.

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Anyway, it’s done. I’m gonna put a good canvas on it before the snow flies, and just on top. No sides. This spot is full day sun, so I want it to keep airing out.

I also rake up all of my debris. I mow there, and that debris makes great mulch around the yard trees. Grass don’t go thru big shards of bark and slab pine. The pieces on the ground have nice flat sides. I’m gonna use those to hold down the canvas.

Those two trees in the background with red paint are dead bur oak. Those will also get made up for grilling wood too. If I can get my hands on a 120 lb grease keg, I’m gonna make charcoal out of the limb wood.

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After deer season, I’ve got to haul out a bunch of ash. Not quite as much as that pine pile, but I am gonna make 2-3 years of grilling wood. I’ve got enough for two years already on the ground, but want to get a third year of fresh cut split and get it drying. Black ash seems to take two growing seasons to dry if I cut it live, and I split mine down to no more than about 3” thick.


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