how big is your fireplace bed?




On Wed, 19 Aug 2009, Rob Monitor wrote:

> YES, I paid $650.00 for it.. It's all oak and like most of it I could handle 
> but just a few of the logs are so big even when I cut a 16 to 18 inch piece 
> off the log I can't get it up on to the splitter...
>    ROB FROM MINNESOTA
>  ----- Original Message -----
>  From: Lee A. Stone
>  To: [email protected]
>  Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 12:04 AM
>  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] chainsaws..
>
>
>
>  Rob , if I may. might ai ask what you paid for that load of wood. .
>  when I last bought a loat like that in 85 it was $350 green or $450
>  seasoned but never all oak. that stuff is a sona of a gun to split by
>  hand, in my opinion. Lee
>
>  On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 10:10:43PM -0500,
>  Rob Monitor wrote:
>  > HI, Well I meant the logs are 24 in diameter and I have about 15 of them I 
> have bin cutting and splitting up the smaller ones just fine but the big ones 
> I just can't seem to move around that good I'm not a very big guy...
>  > ROB FROM MINNESOTA
>  > ----- Original Message -----
>  > From: clifford
>  > To: [email protected]
>  > Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2009 8:47 PM
>  > Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] chainsaws..
>  >
>  >
>  > Dear Rob:
>  > If your oak logs are 24 inches around, my math tells me that the logs are 
> less than eight inches in diameter, and I would think that a section of such 
> a log can be handled without difficulty. If the measurement is across the end 
> of the log, then a stick of oak which has a 24 inch diameter and is a foot 
> and a half long can be a load. I would suggest rolling the stick in to 
> position on your log splitter and hitting the button. Making a ramp, if 
> necessary, would be easier than splitting by hand, unless you are pretty good 
> with a mall
>  > or as we call them here in hillbilly country, a go-devil.
>  > If oak has nice straight grain, splitting a block which is only eighteen 
> inches long with a mall
>  > should be fairly easy. My go-devil comes in at seven or eight pounds, and 
> on straight grained oak, a very satisfying sound accompanies the splitting of 
> the block with one strong strike.
>  > When the grain is all squirrelly, then time to role the block to the 
> hydraulic splitter.
>  >
>  > Yours Truly,
>  >
>  > Clifford Wilson
>  > ----- Original Message -----
>  > From: Rob Monitor
>  > To: [email protected]
>  > Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2009 3:29 PM
>  > Subject: [BlindHandyMan] chainsaws..
>  >
>  > HI, What I'm wondering is can a guy cut a log the long way with a 
> chainsaws with out hurting the saw or himself?? Why I'm asking this is I have 
> a lot of oak logs that are about 24 inches around and up from there... So 
> when I cut a 16 to 18 inch off the log I can't move it myself to put in the 
> wood splitter... So I was thinking that if I cut down the long way on the log 
> then cut the 16 to 18 inch piece it would be in two pieces then maybe I could 
> move it...
>  > THANKS ROB FROM MINNESOTA
>  >
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