I'm fascinated by the lumber mill. Whether it be modern tech , old fashioned, manual , steam powered, or water powered. The lumber mill has got to be one of the most influential creations for construction ever
Beauiful sawing, a lot of high grade stairs, doors, cabinetry and other fine designed architectural detailed lumber was produced! Thanks for the video.
A friend of mine fell on one of those circular head rigs. His 15 yr old son was there working with him !! Be careful. Follow lockout procedures. Stay safe RIp Nick Skuratoff
I appreciate your talking about what's going on. Please continue to do so. Anything interesting to you is interesting to us. Even boring stuff to you will probably be interesting to us. Those who like silence can hit the mute button.
No you’re 100% correct. Honestly that’s been a thing I’ve been getting passed to make the talking better😅 A lot of easy stuff is just second nature that I don’t think to talk about. The more I do though, the talking will get better:)
@@Helmsburgsawmill Althought it is usually very difficult to see the carriage and log when you are rotating it, if it can be seen better, one suggestion I have is to tell us how you select the first cut. Your logs are usually of high quality and very straight but if odd ones come along, it would be interesting to know how you start and select a rotation for the first cut. Thanks. I know that talking in public (even just for a recording) is difficult for some. When I started radio, I was fairly quiet but after a year or so, I found I was far more chatty in public and on the air. It is a learned skill and not one that comes naturally. Thanks for your posts. I really like watching you position the edger saws so quickly and accurately.
We had a 10' Birdseye maple on time that scaled over 900 board feet. It was a pain because we had to keep turning it to narrow it down but it made incredible flooring in the end.
I'll start by saying I don't know the terminology so I hope I can write it in a clear manner. After squaring up the first two sides I notice you go straight to size and don't have to take a skim cut, for example if you're cutting two 8x4 out of the center of the log, you want to the third face to 8" and the fourth face to be 8" plus a saw width, have you memorized all the cuts you take or do you work from a chart or do mental arithmetic?
Do you use any of the lumber for your own projects or does it all go to market ? I guess I'm asking if you're a sawyer only or are you a wood worker as well ? great looking oak by the way 👍
A lot of it goes to market, we sell a lot in house, and yes some personal project:) survey my surroundings when I give my intro on the video I’m about to upload
Caveat! The Point Of View provided in the footage may not be a true reflection of their proximity to the unguarded rotating equipment. But it sure makes me uncomfortable…
Beautiful boards! I don't mind at all if you do some chatting. Wonder what kind of market you have for the boards. I'll take oak over popular any day except it's way too heavy for making bee hives. Made a bunch of them with popular and sycamore. Guess it doesn't matter what it is when the bears get into it. Then, you have dead bees and firewood.😊😊
@@Helmsburgsawmill It looks like your using longs for your sawbits on the headsaw any reason for that? I use Simmons’s carbide on our headsaw just cuz I cut a lot of old dirty pallet logs and I use longs on our verticals edger
Dunno about when it needs hammering, but if you look closely and watch a number of the previous videos you can tell the top sawblade does sit a bit forward of the main blade and down slightly as well so there is some 'overlap' of the blades to insure there's no cutting gap between the blades. You definitely don't want there to be a gap in the sawing when working through those massive logs that need the top blade.
Grade doesn’t change in Les your more than half the length of the board so he could be leaving more wane on every board and his daily footage will increase by maybe 5% or more He’s doing a great job actually vertical edgers are difficult to run
You must put a guard over the saw drive train if the camera person is going to get that close to it. I get shivers when I see the footage they get by getting closer to it. Don’t dismiss these observations please!
Another video with amazing camera work. Those up close and personal shots of the sawblade are deeply appreciated. Stay safe God bless.✌️🇨🇦
It's great how you utilize every inch of that log! Andy working hard!
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I'm fascinated by the lumber mill. Whether it be modern tech , old fashioned, manual , steam powered, or water powered. The lumber mill has got to be one of the most influential creations for construction ever
I like you talking. You have great information
100,000 subs incoming. Keep up the good work.
I sure will sir!!
Thank you for sharing
Amazing work Beautiful wood super craftsmanship you are Amazing so nice to watch ty 🏆🏆👴🙏🙏💜
And, I do like your videos very much!
Beauiful sawing, a lot of high grade stairs, doors, cabinetry and other fine designed architectural detailed lumber was produced!
Thanks for the video.
Mesmerizing
The sawed lumber is beautiful!
thanks to video from finland🙂👍
Interesting, how often do you have to sharpen the blades ?
A friend of mine fell on one of those circular head rigs. His 15 yr old son was there working with him !! Be careful. Follow lockout procedures. Stay safe
RIp Nick Skuratoff
I’m so sorry to hear that:/ That’s wild. Was it recently?
@@Helmsburgsawmill no back in mid 80’s
I appreciate your talking about what's going on. Please continue to do so. Anything interesting to you is interesting to us. Even boring stuff to you will probably be interesting to us. Those who like silence can hit the mute button.
No you’re 100% correct. Honestly that’s been a thing I’ve been getting passed to make the talking better😅 A lot of easy stuff is just second nature that I don’t think to talk about. The more I do though, the talking will get better:)
@@Helmsburgsawmill Althought it is usually very difficult to see the carriage and log when you are rotating it, if it can be seen better, one suggestion I have is to tell us how you select the first cut. Your logs are usually of high quality and very straight but if odd ones come along, it would be interesting to know how you start and select a rotation for the first cut. Thanks. I know that talking in public (even just for a recording) is difficult for some. When I started radio, I was fairly quiet but after a year or so, I found I was far more chatty in public and on the air. It is a learned skill and not one that comes naturally. Thanks for your posts. I really like watching you position the edger saws so quickly and accurately.
I’d like to see some video inside the the control booth to see how you operate everything
Shuts the hell up and starts sawing. I love it ❤️
Where is the helmsburg mill located at In what state ?
Indiana.
Definitely don't mind the commentary keeps us informed ,as long as it doesn't slow you down.😀
Do you ever try to save any of the edgings off the head rig for short/narrow boards?
We had a 10' Birdseye maple on time that scaled over 900 board feet. It was a pain because we had to keep turning it to narrow it down but it made incredible flooring in the end.
I'll start by saying I don't know the terminology so I hope I can write it in a clear manner.
After squaring up the first two sides I notice you go straight to size and don't have to take a skim cut, for example if you're cutting two 8x4 out of the center of the log, you want to the third face to 8" and the fourth face to be 8" plus a saw width, have you memorized all the cuts you take or do you work from a chart or do mental arithmetic?
I do mental arithmetic for the most part! There’s too many combinations to memorize if pair me sawing grade, ties, cants, and custom orders!
I’ll also add those logs were actually 13’ long!
Do you use any of the lumber for your own projects or does it all go to market ?
I guess I'm asking if you're a sawyer only or are you a wood worker as well ?
great looking oak by the way 👍
A lot of it goes to market, we sell a lot in house, and yes some personal project:) survey my surroundings when I give my intro on the video I’m about to upload
Caveat! The Point Of View provided in the footage may not be a true reflection of their proximity to the unguarded rotating equipment. But it sure makes me uncomfortable…
Beautiful boards! I don't mind at all if you do some chatting. Wonder what kind of market you have for the boards. I'll take oak over popular any day except it's way too heavy for making bee hives. Made a bunch of them with popular and sycamore. Guess it doesn't matter what it is when the bears get into it. Then, you have dead bees and firewood.😊😊
Sometime should tell us what 3 logs were scaled at. Then saw them keep track of what you got out of them cants and lumber
I agree! I really want to do this at some point. Honestly most of the videos aren’t planned at all. But I need to do this with some larger logs soon
@@Helmsburgsawmill It looks like your using longs for your sawbits on the headsaw any reason for that? I use Simmons’s carbide on our headsaw just cuz I cut a lot of old dirty pallet logs and I use longs on our verticals edger
Dose the top blade sit, farther forward of the main blade,and how often dose a blade need to be hammered.
Dunno about when it needs hammering, but if you look closely and watch a number of the previous videos you can tell the top sawblade does sit a bit forward of the main blade and down slightly as well so there is some 'overlap' of the blades to insure there's no cutting gap between the blades. You definitely don't want there to be a gap in the sawing when working through those massive logs that need the top blade.
Why are you leaving wain on the one end when you can just drop down a little bit and make a clear board?
Because I’m going for max width and wain is acceptable. Honestly there were a few boards I edged heavy in this video
Grade doesn’t change in Les your more than half the length of the board so he could be leaving more wane on every board and his daily footage will increase by maybe 5% or more He’s doing a great job actually vertical edgers are difficult to run
You must put a guard over the saw drive train if the camera person is going to get that close to it. I get shivers when I see the footage they get by getting closer to it. Don’t dismiss these observations please!
If it makes you feel better, Sam is holding a stick with the phone attached, that way he can get it close
Why are the logs green?
A lot of it’s the lighting.
Hope the family is well by the way.
It is much better to understand the concept of what is going on while the sawing is going on instead of wondering about it.