Excellent video, it has 100% convinced me to drive to Tractor Supply, walk past the splitting mauls and get that 30 ton Champion power log splitter. Thank you for shining a light and the inspiration.
@@joshuastacy7564 splitting wood is a lot like riding a bicycle. If doing smaller amounts for the occasional fire in the fireplace, then yes, it’s like that scenic bike ride through the country. But if doing day in and day out heating a home all winter, then it’s like riding a bike to work day in and day out…it gets very tedious knowing how fast, efficient and comfortable driving a car would be.
@@joshuastacy7564 I burn 10 cord a year and have a 37 ton splitter. I have no ego to stroke, but I do have a home to heat through a Minnesota winter. The satisfaction is having all your wood cut and stacked by the furnace before the snow flies. I also use a chainsaw to cut, but I'm sure you'd be happy to cut down trees using a hand saw.
Words usually spoken by a person who goes through 3 face cords of firewood per year not by someone using 15 loggers cords per year. lol @@joshuastacy7564
I can’t even believe this. I almost stopped watching in the beginning because I thought it was bologna. I actually went outside and tried this on some real nasty wood I have. It’s literally half the effort. UNBELIEVABLE. Possibly twice the swings but half the effort. Good work, thanks for sharing.
All the negative comments here are either from guys too hard headed to imagine there may be a better way or are spoiled by nice species to split. I’m a tree guy and I heat my house 100% with wood. I also split it all by hand. I use all species, shapes, and sizes and have used every method I’ve seen. This is hands down the best I’ve seen (and tried) for tough splitting wood. As for putting it up on a block, yeah that’s extra unnecessary effort if you’re just blasting through easy splitting wood but for this method its obviously needed.
i have been splitting wood with my maul wrong for the last 10 years, seeing the crack, hammering the hell out of it, picking up the half that fell and doing it all over again. ohhh man my back will thank you for this amazing video!!!!!!!!!
That's just incredible!, as I was watching this, the "logic" of your technique just made absolute sense, first I've ever seen this method, all credit to you for passing on this knowledge, and you weren't out of breath at the end of it 😮
Jeff, I just had to pick my jaw up from the floor. For a 66 year old man who has split a few cords of wood in my day this was just unbelievable. I was one of those who struck it like you demonstrate at 3:05 of your video. All brawn, very little technic or brain were used. Thank you sir for an exceptionally educational video!
I have split wood for fifty years and I have some big rounds to split now so I thought I'd watch a couple RUclips videos just to see if there might be some tricks to learn. I have split from the outside in but never went around the piece first to establish the first cracks. Don't ever think that you can't learn something fellers. Excellent video. Thank you sir!
I have been split logs for a few years, starting from edge to the center, but I never walk around. What you did is quite creative! You follow the rings of wood. It looks fun too. I will try. Greatly appreciated.
Thanks Jeff! I watched this video a while ago, but to be honest, I forgot about it. Yesterday I came across it again and decided to put it into practice, and it made a huge difference! So thanks for that and thanks for the no BS teaching style as well!
Great video and excellent pointers. We split a lot by hand, and I’ll certainly use your technique. We split in the winter, when the woods frozen. Splits a lot easier.
This would have made my life a lot easier two years ago! That being said, I have two more oak trees to take down that I will be much less stressed about, thanks man!
I love the way you work WITH the wood rather than imposing your will on it. I learned several things from this one video. I've watched a number of videos on this topic and learned nothing helpful. I'm not sure if (at 66, a petite woman) I will have the strength to manage this, but at least I will have a strategy. Many, many thanks! Good teaching, too!
Gee, thanks, dude. I gotta get me one of those splitting mauls one day. I've been splitting wood by hand since the early 70s. Today I split a couple of big pieces of pecan. I have a few pieces that are around two and a half feet across to split soon. Yesterday, I split the piece from the main fork of the tree using a 4 lb wedge, a 5 lb wedge, a cross wedge, an 8 lb sledge hammer, and a double bit axe. It was a lot of work but fun, too. I like to talk to my wood and my tools like, "Oh, a wise guy!", or, to the wedges when they jump back out, "I'm gonna beat you with a hammer, if you don't get in there and split that wood!" My favorite saying to the wood reminds me of my mother telling my brother, "I'm gonna bust you open" (if you don't, blah, blah, blah, . . .) 😂😂
Seeing the knots at the very end was worth the wait. This is a great technique. I was ready to start at the center, but thank you for saving my back. You’re the only video that talks about chipping off the outer edges first and working around the log. Thanks!
Great video, finally someone who makes it look easy and efficient. Thank you my back will appreciate this technique, I know I can get a splitter but I like to do it while I still can, the sooner we stop the sooner we can't anymore.
Hey Jeff, that was more than educational-it was fun to watch. Few folks make time spent viewing worth it, let alone profitable *I have three HUGE maples awaiting me outside that had to be dropped for safety reasons* your video helps me turn them into about 2 years of warmth for my family.
I split almost all of my wood on the ground. That thing about the ground absorbing energy I find to be much more theoretical than actually a problem in real life. I tend to use solid ground when available, but it isn't really necessary. I find wood is easier to split at that lower level than up on a block plus no lifting, and no putting the maul down and picking it back up. I used to use splitting blocks, but gradually just quit for efficiency's sake. So much less work involved. Also, you can split anywhere, no moving the wood to the block or vice versa, just wade in and start splitting.
Agreed. Never waste time or energy hoisting a log up on top of another. I burn 24" lengths, so a 30" diameter wet oak log can approach 500 lbs. Velocity and momentum of my 8 lb maul is greatly increased, and I can usually blow apart a 24" diameter log 1 to 3 hits. If it does not start to split by 3 swings, I use a wedge and sledge. Spit 14-1/2 cords this way during the COVID vacations in 2020. Still giving that wood away to my neighbors and friends.
I split my small diameter logs on a block but anything larger than a foot or so, I will just leave on the ground so I don’t have to lift it up and place it over and over
@@ar1701 according to my log weight calculator. A red oak round 30" in diameter and 24" long would be about 619 lbs. For comparison, sugar pine would be about 511 lbs, and red cedar would be about 275.
I find with smaller diameter rounds/splits like limbwood, it will bounce off the ground and a chopping block will prevent the bouncing. Otherwise I agree with your assessment- why waste energy by not getting a full swing?
Splitting large pieces of wood with a wedge and sledgehammer is my catharsis. Splitting THOSE pieces with my ax is my joy. It's such great exercise and there's something about hearing that first crackle of the wood giving way. This is a great video, and, frankly, your method has never crossed my mind. I do see the benefits of it. Thanks for sharing!
I doubted you at first.. I have to apologize. This is great information. Many thanks! I've been using 2 old tires on a solid wood platform that I built. It works OK for small rounds. Thanks again
I started splitting firewood in 1958 and I was taught by my Dad a lumberjack from Kentucky. He used a double bladed axe and a splitting maul that were both handmade by a blacksmith. He taught me the technique of splitting wood the smart way. It was identical to the way you demonstrated. EXCEPT - for the ring you made splitting off the outer layer. This appears to be a distinct improvement. Five stars to you Sir! A video well worth watching. You do need to improve your accuracy a little. When you put a bunch of cracks in the wood it gives the wood a place to go if you know what I mean. Art from Ohio
Very interesting technique! This is a great technique. I never thought about encouraging the wood to almost split itself, lol. I'm one of those guys that will just keep smashing at the middle until I get my way. If the maul does finally stick I just smash that with a sledge. Well, that's how I grew up doing it. Now I use a power splitter.
Yeah, I got that going now on some 23" rounds. I find that when it is below freezing the logs WANT to split. I think the water in it expands and bursts or shatters the wood. Busting them them smaller makes it easy to split them with a 6 ton electric splitter. It is nice getting out the axe and watching them split.
beautiful wood. love red oak. red oak and white oak is what i primarily use for firewood. i've been cutting and splitting wood for many many years. i've never used that method, i'll definitely try it, i have always been one to exploit the first crack. but it is a lot of bending over, picking back up, repositioning. i liked how you just chipped them off like that, well done!
Great video. I do something similar with a fiskers x27 axe. And I can really chop down the big ones fast. I probably do up to 18 or 20 inches easily with this type of technique. I work my way around and usually the wood splits out as I'm going, but if not I just continue the walk around. Wood seems to split better in winter when everything is frozen, of course. The smaller axe head doesn't wind me out quickly like a bigger maul axe would do. Fiskers makes the best axe (in the x27) as far as I'm concerned but you do have to worry about kickback sometimes or glance-off because the axe is so light. I've been splitting wood for over 40 years and its the est axe I've ever used. I can split for about an hour to a time easily. And you can really swing that axe without getting winded. Thanks for the video. Nice to see the technique. All the best!
I am very glad I watched this video, because I have a couple of rounds like that and I was wondering how the heck I was going to break it up by hand ... this honestly looks like fun, thank you for sharing!
@@robindegu7294 I use the X27 6lb axe. They have an 8lb. It’s so much better than my heavy maul. Quicker swings and if I can upload the huge cherry tree I split I will.
@@robindegu7294i have a few x27 videos on my channel, so check it out there. I've used the fiskars 8lb maul and it is a beast but the x27 is way better for longetivity. It would have easily ripped through that oak round.
@@robindegu7294 I hand split more wood than your average bear , way more. He is right that was a lot of wasted hits and wasted effort. Depending on branch joints , that round I can do in 2-3 min . I know it's a demo vid but there is a lot of wasted swings, a lot
Your early "swings " were light. At some point before 6:50 you started to lean into your maul. From the Get-Go, I would suggest that a person start "Knocking the Edges Off". Swing the maul/splitting axe hard, without hurting yourself. The pre-existing checks or splits can be utilized, but not right away on such a big log.
At the beginning i wasn't convinced at all at your technique. But towards the end you got me! Its probably the next easiest way after using a 10t wood splitter.
I see a Father’s Day gift in my husband’s future. He always says you can never have too many tools-which is why I have my own set too! PS. I love your sense of humor.
Thanks for the tutorial! I did notice your breathing accelerated a good bit. It takes a strong cardio-pulmonary system to swing that heavy maul that often even half a day!
Get yourself a trailer tire and keep it near your splitting stump to put your round inside. This will contain the new splits and it will save bending over to pickup the smaller pieces every time they split off. You did confirm all my practices about reducing the holding wood, but added a new twist which is working around in a smaller circle. Thanks.
Your method is fine if you have a lot of extra time. I use the 5 lb Gransfors Bruks large splitting axe, which likely weighs half that of the Fiskars maul. I start with the edge of the round and the pieces fly off immediately. No pre-hitting required. I continue working around towards the middle. Occasionally I have to strike twice to break a piece off. I split 10 to 12 full cords per year using this method and it is pleasing work. I do swing harder than you, but with half the weight and likely a third the number of swings, it is an efficient method. I have split with everything from a double bladed felling axe (not cool), small mauls, medium mauls, heavy duty mauls, and even the ingenious Lever Axe. The time tested splitting axe is the best thing going. It’s a method worth considering.
I just stumbled upon this video and thought I'd be open to learning something new. I've split wood most of my life, I'm now 63. I do it all by hand with a 6 LB maul. I split similarly to you - although each log is a bit different, so I may use a different approach depending on the log. It would have taken me much less than 1/2 as many hits and much less time than this video. My father took trees down for a living (climbed, etc.) which he taught me and I learned how to split logs by the age of 10. My family used firewood to heat our house and also had a firewood business. I could have had 2-3 logs split with fewer strokes than the in this video and had much more firewood ready for winter. I split and use about 6 chords plus a year. But there's a difference between me and you - you find this pleasing work and I find it to be work :)
Likewise. I use a heavy maul and swing granny style - straight up then straight down - not over one shoulder. It's all core strength and I pound that log (on the ground) hard. I don't want to swing 20 times on a log when I can bust it up in 5 swings. The method in the video is certainly one way (especially with big logs) but doesn't have to be THE way. Whether it's hackberry, ash or hedge it seems like moisture content and knots are the biggest factor in stubbornness.
I'm 77 years old and have been splitting wood for most of my life. Now I do it mostly for exercise and I enjoy making firewood for our fireplace. For the last 5 years I've been using the 7 lb. Gransfors Bruks splitting mall instead of my old hardware store 8 lb. mall. I swing straight up and down letting the tool do the work. This mall is very sharp and efficient. If the round won't split after 5 or 6 tries I bring out the wedges and if that won't work I use the chainsaw to "noodle' it. I use a chopping block, and if the pieces fall to the ground I don't mind the exercise of picking them up. I split mostly black locust, black cherry, and some mulberry or hard maple. It's fun to do during the fall and winter when I can't play golf. I split about 8 or 9 cords a year. I try to keep ahead about a 2 years supply
That’s a great explanation of your technique. I like bucking Billy ray and using an axe and his golf method. But this is definitely a great way to get to golfing.
This is a technique I use at times , it works well. Keeping the knot on the bottom when possible also lightens the work. You get a good work out when knots are on the top & bottom. Stay safe, Joe Z
It’s easier to do when you don’t try as hard. Visualize a spot about six inches down in the round directly under the spot you want to hit and the maul will go there. If you try to stare that first dent in the wood down like a hawk your dominant eye will pull it too far to one side.
Sledge and wedge on most obvious check. Split piece in half. From then on, each swing splits off a piece of firewood, like you demonstrated. I'll try what you did here, but at the 5:00 mark you've already hit that piece more times than I would, splitting it all into manageable pieces. I do like the economy of motion, though; I swing a lot harder and maybe that's my mistake.
I use the Fiskars Isocore for splitting the rounds into 4, 6 or 8 wedges while they are still on the ground. Then process the wedges on a block using a tire to make sure they don't fall down. The last part is done using the Fiskars X27. The wedges are light enough that I can turn them by hand if needed, so I don't have to walk around the block. I find this to be the quickest way, and I don't have to lift the rounds onto the block - which I probably couldn't in most cases even if I wanted.
thanks for the tips. learned quite a bit here. one thing I would do at the end with those stubborn pieces, is use a wedge, rather than trying to push the maul through it. works for me.
If you rub down the head of your splitting maul with wax it will penetrate the wood easier. About every 30 minutes rub the surfaces of the head with an old candle, parafin, or something similar. Especially effective when using an ax as it keep the ax head from getting stuck.
9:08 Did you know manual wood splitting boosts a man's testosterone production so the wife is the happiest when lots of wood is getting split....lol....oh more on topic...fiskers make great splitting axes....great video sir.
You got a like from me from your first joke. If I could give you a second like, it would be for the really great tips! Thanks! As a small person, I would have thought cracking and not splitting it to be a bad thing, now I'll have more patience and go at it more methodically.
Excellent video, it has 100% convinced me to drive to Tractor Supply, walk past the splitting mauls and get that 30 ton Champion power log splitter. Thank you for shining a light and the inspiration.
Eh.... Little personal satisfaction in a motorized splitter..
@@joshuastacy7564 splitting wood is a lot like riding a bicycle. If doing smaller amounts for the occasional fire in the fireplace, then yes, it’s like that scenic bike ride through the country. But if doing day in and day out heating a home all winter, then it’s like riding a bike to work day in and day out…it gets very tedious knowing how fast, efficient and comfortable driving a car would be.
@@joshuastacy7564 I burn 10 cord a year and have a 37 ton splitter. I have no ego to stroke, but I do have a home to heat through a Minnesota winter. The satisfaction is having all your wood cut and stacked by the furnace before the snow flies. I also use a chainsaw to cut, but I'm sure you'd be happy to cut down trees using a hand saw.
Words usually spoken by a person who goes through 3 face cords of firewood per year not by someone using 15 loggers cords per year. lol @@joshuastacy7564
@@cactiguide HA! I hear ya!
I can’t even believe this. I almost stopped watching in the beginning because I thought it was bologna. I actually went outside and tried this on some real nasty wood I have. It’s literally half the effort. UNBELIEVABLE. Possibly twice the swings but half the effort. Good work, thanks for sharing.
All the negative comments here are either from guys too hard headed to imagine there may be a better way or are spoiled by nice species to split. I’m a tree guy and I heat my house 100% with wood. I also split it all by hand. I use all species, shapes, and sizes and have used every method I’ve seen. This is hands down the best I’ve seen (and tried) for tough splitting wood. As for putting it up on a block, yeah that’s extra unnecessary effort if you’re just blasting through easy splitting wood but for this method its obviously needed.
Man, i clicked this thinking 11 mins was excessive. Awesome tutorial, thank you. Learned a ton!
i have been splitting wood with my maul wrong for the last 10 years, seeing the crack, hammering the hell out of it, picking up the half that fell and doing it all over again. ohhh man my back will thank you for this amazing video!!!!!!!!!
You should always keep d knot on the bottom,🇨🇮🇨🇮
That round is made for a wedge in the middle,to split in half
That's just incredible!, as I was watching this, the "logic" of your technique just made absolute sense, first I've ever seen this method, all credit to you for passing on this knowledge, and you weren't out of breath at the end of it 😮
Watching this makes me soooo thankful for my log splitter ;)
You're a strong, independent woman. Don't need no man.
.. yeah…. Powered log splitter will save you all kinds of time to enjoy that gym membership workout.
.
Jeff, I just had to pick my jaw up from the floor. For a 66 year old man who has split a few cords of wood in my day this was just unbelievable. I was one of those who struck it like you demonstrate at 3:05 of your video. All brawn, very little technic or brain were used. Thank you sir for an exceptionally educational video!
Thank you Sir,🤠 for showing me something that I will use for the rest of my life.
I have split wood for fifty years and I have some big rounds to split now so I thought I'd watch a couple RUclips videos just to see if there might be some tricks to learn. I have split from the outside in but never went around the piece first to establish the first cracks. Don't ever think that you can't learn something fellers. Excellent video. Thank you sir!
That's the smartest and easiest splitting technique I've ever seen. Thank you!
Dude, you've taken me to the next level of work smarter not harder.
I have been split logs for a few years, starting from edge to the center, but I never walk around. What you did is quite creative! You follow the rings of wood. It looks fun too. I will try. Greatly appreciated.
I am impressed. The most efficient technique for manual splitting. Wish I knew this before i started using a hydraulic splitter.
And just 11 Minutes for 1 round of oak, incredible.
Holy smokes, think you've changed my life! Thanks for the vid.
Thanks Jeff! I watched this video a while ago, but to be honest, I forgot about it. Yesterday I came across it again and decided to put it into practice, and it made a huge difference! So thanks for that and thanks for the no BS teaching style as well!
Great video and excellent pointers. We split a lot by hand, and I’ll certainly use your technique. We split in the winter, when the woods frozen. Splits a lot easier.
This would have made my life a lot easier two years ago! That being said, I have two more oak trees to take down that I will be much less stressed about, thanks man!
I love the way you work WITH the wood rather than imposing your will on it. I learned several things from this one video. I've watched a number of videos on this topic and learned nothing helpful. I'm not sure if (at 66, a petite woman) I will have the strength to manage this, but at least I will have a strategy. Many, many thanks! Good teaching, too!
i'm thankful for your video. both the explainers, the camera work, and demonstration.
Gee, thanks, dude. I gotta get me one of those splitting mauls one day. I've been splitting wood by hand since the early 70s. Today I split a couple of big pieces of pecan. I have a few pieces that are around two and a half feet across to split soon.
Yesterday, I split the piece from the main fork of the tree using a 4 lb wedge, a 5 lb wedge, a cross wedge, an 8 lb sledge hammer, and a double bit axe.
It was a lot of work but fun, too. I like to talk to my wood and my tools like, "Oh, a wise guy!", or, to the wedges when they jump back out, "I'm gonna beat you with a hammer, if you don't get in there and split that wood!" My favorite saying to the wood reminds me of my mother telling my brother, "I'm gonna bust you open" (if you don't, blah, blah, blah, . . .) 😂😂
Seeing the knots at the very end was worth the wait. This is a great technique. I was ready to start at the center, but thank you for saving my back. You’re the only video that talks about chipping off the outer edges first and working around the log. Thanks!
Great video, finally someone who makes it look easy and efficient. Thank you my back will appreciate this technique, I know I can get a splitter but I like to do it while I still can, the sooner we stop the sooner we can't anymore.
Hey Jeff, that was more than educational-it was fun to watch. Few folks make time spent viewing worth it, let alone profitable *I have three HUGE maples awaiting me outside that had to be dropped for safety reasons* your video helps me turn them into about 2 years of warmth for my family.
rent a splitter.
Got some Bob Ross vibes out of this video. Nice work. Very calming and good splitting technique.
WHAAAAT!!???? This is a game changer for me!!! Nice! So glad that I came across this video. 🤓👌🏼
I split almost all of my wood on the ground. That thing about the ground absorbing energy I find to be much more theoretical than actually a problem in real life. I tend to use solid ground when available, but it isn't really necessary. I find wood is easier to split at that lower level than up on a block plus no lifting, and no putting the maul down and picking it back up. I used to use splitting blocks, but gradually just quit for efficiency's sake. So much less work involved. Also, you can split anywhere, no moving the wood to the block or vice versa, just wade in and start splitting.
Agreed. Never waste time or energy hoisting a log up on top of another. I burn 24" lengths, so a 30" diameter wet oak log can approach 500 lbs. Velocity and momentum of my 8 lb maul is greatly increased, and I can usually blow apart a 24" diameter log 1 to 3 hits. If it does not start to split by 3 swings, I use a wedge and sledge. Spit 14-1/2 cords this way during the COVID vacations in 2020. Still giving that wood away to my neighbors and friends.
@@francismccabe3265 lol 2 foot by 30 inches = 500 pounds huh DAM !!! im strong !! and 73 by the way.
I split my small diameter logs on a block but anything larger than a foot or so, I will just leave on the ground so I don’t have to lift it up and place it over and over
@@ar1701 according to my log weight calculator. A red oak round 30" in diameter and 24" long would be about 619 lbs. For comparison, sugar pine would be about 511 lbs, and red cedar would be about 275.
I find with smaller diameter rounds/splits like limbwood, it will bounce off the ground and a chopping block will prevent the bouncing. Otherwise I agree with your assessment- why waste energy by not getting a full swing?
I've got a bunch of dead pecan to split and I am very happy to have seen how it's done the right way. Glad I stumbled on your video!
WOW! very smart way to split firewood, thank you, I need to get one of those axes
Splitting large pieces of wood with a wedge and sledgehammer is my catharsis. Splitting THOSE pieces with my ax is my joy. It's such great exercise and there's something about hearing that first crackle of the wood giving way.
This is a great video, and, frankly, your method has never crossed my mind. I do see the benefits of it. Thanks for sharing!
I especially love splitting wood after a demanding workweek. I put on some music, turn my brain off, and just go to town on some rounds.
You made this look so easy! Work smarter not harder!
I doubted you at first.. I have to apologize. This is great information. Many thanks! I've been using 2 old tires on a solid wood platform that I built. It works OK for small rounds. Thanks again
Just bought a house with a fireplace. So I am new to splittin' firewood. This was an awesome video! great technique! Thanks for sharing!
Get a moisture meter
I started splitting firewood in 1958 and I was taught by my Dad a lumberjack from Kentucky. He used a double bladed axe and a splitting maul that were both handmade by a blacksmith. He taught me the technique of splitting wood the smart way. It was identical to the way you demonstrated. EXCEPT - for the ring you made splitting off the outer layer. This appears to be a distinct improvement. Five stars to you Sir! A video well worth watching.
You do need to improve your accuracy a little. When you put a bunch of cracks in the wood it gives the wood a place to go if you know what I mean.
Art from Ohio
Very interesting technique! This is a great technique. I never thought about encouraging the wood to almost split itself, lol. I'm one of those guys that will just keep smashing at the middle until I get my way. If the maul does finally stick I just smash that with a sledge. Well, that's how I grew up doing it. Now I use a power splitter.
I have a Big Jim in my living room and a pecan tree that fell last year. This was exactly what I needed. THANKYOU AND Hello from Rocky Mount!
Yeah, I got that going now on some 23" rounds. I find that when it is below freezing the logs WANT to split. I think the water in it expands and bursts or shatters the wood. Busting them them smaller makes it easy to split them with a 6 ton electric splitter.
It is nice getting out the axe and watching them split.
beautiful wood. love red oak. red oak and white oak is what i primarily use for firewood. i've been cutting and splitting wood for many many years. i've never used that method, i'll definitely try it, i have always been one to exploit the first crack. but it is a lot of bending over, picking back up, repositioning. i liked how you just chipped them off like that, well done!
Great video. I do something similar with a fiskers x27 axe. And I can really chop down the big ones fast. I probably do up to 18 or 20 inches easily with this type of technique. I work my way around and usually the wood splits out as I'm going, but if not I just continue the walk around. Wood seems to split better in winter when everything is frozen, of course. The smaller axe head doesn't wind me out quickly like a bigger maul axe would do. Fiskers makes the best axe (in the x27) as far as I'm concerned but you do have to worry about kickback sometimes or glance-off because the axe is so light. I've been splitting wood for over 40 years and its the est axe I've ever used. I can split for about an hour to a time easily. And you can really swing that axe without getting winded. Thanks for the video. Nice to see the technique. All the best!
I am very glad I watched this video, because I have a couple of rounds like that and I was wondering how the heck I was going to break it up by hand ... this honestly looks like fun, thank you for sharing!
First I've ever seen this technique. This is a game changer for me. Thanks!
Once the integrity of the logs circumferenc is broken they can usually be split through the centre. Great video,hard work and good humour. Cheers
Nice Ahnold voice...
I save the knots and forks for when the temp goes down to 30 below. At that temp it just explodes when you strike.
I use a Fiskars X27. Start at edges and this could be done in half the time with a lot less swings.
maybe put up a video yourself. i'm curious between getting the maul vs the x27 myself
@@robindegu7294
I use the X27 6lb axe. They have an 8lb. It’s so much better than my heavy maul. Quicker swings and if I can upload the huge cherry tree I split I will.
@@robindegu7294i have a few x27 videos on my channel, so check it out there. I've used the fiskars 8lb maul and it is a beast but the x27 is way better for longetivity. It would have easily ripped through that oak round.
@@robindegu7294
I hand split more wood than your average bear , way more. He is right that was a lot of wasted hits and wasted effort. Depending on branch joints , that round I can do in 2-3 min . I know it's a demo vid but there is a lot of wasted swings, a lot
Completely agree !
2-3 min
Your early "swings " were light. At some point before 6:50 you started to lean into your maul. From the Get-Go, I would suggest that a person start "Knocking the Edges Off". Swing the maul/splitting axe hard, without hurting yourself. The pre-existing checks or splits can be utilized, but not right away on such a big log.
A brilliant technique, had never occurred to try it this way; thanks.
Never seen this approach. Love it. Brain over braun
Wow, you make it look so easy. Lesson learned, this is the best video I've seen thus far.
I have been splitting wood for two days. What is left are large knotty pieces with twists. I can’t wait to try this tomorrow.
That is a new way for me to try splitting my big rounds! Thank you.
At the beginning i wasn't convinced at all at your technique. But towards the end you got me! Its probably the next easiest way after using a 10t wood splitter.
Love the video. I am new to wood splitting. I have wedges and the Fiskars hatchet sized maul. Great advice.
Jeff thanks that is a master class in chopping wood
Good video with learnt techniques. I been doing it the hard way for decades 😢. Will adopt.
It's all about knowing what that grain be doing! Haha Thank you so much for this video. I love learning easier ways to get firewood
I see a Father’s Day gift in my husband’s future. He always says you can never have too many tools-which is why I have my own set too! PS. I love your sense of humor.
excellent job. i didn't know what the heck you were gonna try. great work
I have raised pallets on either side of my blocks to ease resetting but I have to say this gave me something to think about. Thanks!
Good thinking. That worked great. Thanks for sharing it with us.
God bless you and your family!
Thanks for the tutorial! I did notice your breathing accelerated a good bit. It takes a strong cardio-pulmonary system to swing that heavy maul that often even half a day!
Best video/technique I've seen. Who the heck wants to keep picking up pieces to split?!
Always happy to see your videos. Great work man
Get yourself a trailer tire and keep it near your splitting stump to put your round inside. This will contain the new splits and it will save bending over to pickup the smaller pieces every time they split off. You did confirm all my practices about reducing the holding wood, but added a new twist which is working around in a smaller circle. Thanks.
Watching this makes me appreciate my Brave log splitter even more! 🙂 Great video for hand splitting, however! Thanks for sharing!
Nice. Never have I seen it done like this before. Learn something every day. No big wood on my place but I’ll remember this. Thanks. Good job.
Your method is fine if you have a lot of extra time. I use the 5 lb Gransfors Bruks large splitting axe, which likely weighs half that of the Fiskars maul. I start with the edge of the round and the pieces fly off immediately. No pre-hitting required. I continue working around towards the middle. Occasionally I have to strike twice to break a piece off. I split 10 to 12 full cords per year using this method and it is pleasing work. I do swing harder than you, but with half the weight and likely a third the number of swings, it is an efficient method. I have split with everything from a double bladed felling axe (not cool), small mauls, medium mauls, heavy duty mauls, and even the ingenious Lever Axe. The time tested splitting axe is the best thing going. It’s a method worth considering.
I just stumbled upon this video and thought I'd be open to learning something new. I've split wood most of my life, I'm now 63. I do it all by hand with a 6 LB maul. I split similarly to you - although each log is a bit different, so I may use a different approach depending on the log. It would have taken me much less than 1/2 as many hits and much less time than this video. My father took trees down for a living (climbed, etc.) which he taught me and I learned how to split logs by the age of 10. My family used firewood to heat our house and also had a firewood business. I could have had 2-3 logs split with fewer strokes than the in this video and had much more firewood ready for winter. I split and use about 6 chords plus a year. But there's a difference between me and you - you find this pleasing work and I find it to be work :)
Likewise. I use a heavy maul and swing granny style - straight up then straight down - not over one shoulder. It's all core strength and I pound that log (on the ground) hard. I don't want to swing 20 times on a log when I can bust it up in 5 swings. The method in the video is certainly one way (especially with big logs) but doesn't have to be THE way. Whether it's hackberry, ash or hedge it seems like moisture content and knots are the biggest factor in stubbornness.
I'm 77 years old and have been splitting wood for most of my life. Now I do it mostly for exercise and I enjoy making firewood for our fireplace. For the last 5 years I've been using the 7 lb. Gransfors Bruks splitting mall instead of my old hardware store 8 lb. mall. I swing straight up and down letting the tool do the work. This mall is very sharp and efficient. If the round won't split after 5 or 6 tries I bring out the wedges and if that won't work I use the chainsaw to "noodle' it. I use a chopping block, and if the pieces fall to the ground I don't mind the exercise of picking them up. I split mostly black locust, black cherry, and some mulberry or hard maple. It's fun to do during the fall and winter when I can't play golf. I split about 8 or 9 cords a year. I try to keep ahead about a 2 years supply
I like the brains over braun approach. Make it as easy as possible! Thanks!
That’s a great explanation of your technique.
I like bucking Billy ray and using an axe and his golf method. But this is definitely a great way to get to golfing.
Jeff - Thanks for the education! Simply brilliant!!! Texas sends!!
Thank you for the lesson.The method worked! Amazing
Excellent demo! I learned something useful here. I’ve been doing it all wrong.
Great! Great video man! Thank you. I am pretty new to axes and woodworking and stuff and I love it. Thank you for your video
Whoah! Great aim brother. Thanks for sharing this technique
Thanks…finally a video from a smart and experienced person.
Green mountain boy liked the way you did that!
Just bought a house with two fireplaces! So helpful!
I find this oddly relaxing (to watch!) - thanks for the advice!
this is amazing! you saved my spine. thank you, thank you -x 1000! next level. game changer
Great video! Thank you for saving me alot of wasted effort.
This is a technique I use at times , it works well. Keeping the knot on the bottom when possible also lightens the work. You get a good work out when knots are on the top & bottom.
Stay safe, Joe Z
Thx for the upload, lovely little vid, showed me something I didn't know.
Thanks for this. Good advice for oak wood splitting.
Thanks for a great and informative video.
This man knows what he's doing, good job.
That fellow has dang good aim! Don’t see many guys that can hit twice in the same spot. 👍👍
It’s easier to do when you don’t try as hard. Visualize a spot about six inches down in the round directly under the spot you want to hit and the maul will go there. If you try to stare that first dent in the wood down like a hawk your dominant eye will pull it too far to one side.
Sledge and wedge on most obvious check. Split piece in half. From then on, each swing splits off a piece of firewood, like you demonstrated. I'll try what you did here, but at the 5:00 mark you've already hit that piece more times than I would, splitting it all into manageable pieces. I do like the economy of motion, though; I swing a lot harder and maybe that's my mistake.
Way to go dad! Love the channel. I’m Old now but have strong grandkids 😂
Brute force and ignorance is how I split wood
Yeah, but your Heart is still Pumping. Think about your Heart. ❤
😅
@LarryVarner-zq5zd
Yeah but I don't have time to think about the heart because a stupid piece of wood has a mile long knot and doesn't want to split
Brute force and knowledge here .
Based on
Very good explanation. Exactly the info I was looking for.
Great approach! Thanks for this vid 👍🏼👍🏼
At the end, I thought for sure that thumb was coming off till you tucked it in. Good idea popping outer pieces.
Wow...thank you. I use a splitter and processor but I was definitely not doing it right with my maul.
I use the Fiskars Isocore for splitting the rounds into 4, 6 or 8 wedges while they are still on the ground. Then process the wedges on a block using a tire to make sure they don't fall down. The last part is done using the Fiskars X27. The wedges are light enough that I can turn them by hand if needed, so I don't have to walk around the block. I find this to be the quickest way, and I don't have to lift the rounds onto the block - which I probably couldn't in most cases even if I wanted.
thanks for the tips. learned quite a bit here. one thing I would do at the end with those stubborn pieces, is use a wedge, rather than trying to push the maul through it. works for me.
If you rub down the head of your splitting maul with wax it will penetrate the wood easier. About every 30 minutes rub the surfaces of the head with an old candle, parafin, or something similar. Especially effective when using an ax as it keep the ax head from getting stuck.
Well done! I learned something and had a couple good laughs 🤣🤣
I've been doin it wrong. Love this technique. Super. Thanks bigly.
9:08 Did you know manual wood splitting boosts a man's testosterone production so the wife is the happiest when lots of wood is getting split....lol....oh more on topic...fiskers make great splitting axes....great video sir.
Fantastic! Thanks. That chicken was probably happy to see something else getting split this time.
You got a like from me from your first joke. If I could give you a second like, it would be for the really great tips! Thanks! As a small person, I would have thought cracking and not splitting it to be a bad thing, now I'll have more patience and go at it more methodically.