How 2x4s Are Made: Sawmill Tour

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • Are 2x4s the greatest building product of all time? Many thanks to Douglas Country Forest Products for the tour. Learn more here: www.dcfp.com/
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Комментарии • 323

  • @basic9254
    @basic9254 Год назад +318

    Would love to see the process Home Depot uses to put the bowing and cupping in before sale. 😂

    • @kylehurley5994
      @kylehurley5994 11 месяцев назад +11

      You made me chuckle

    • @driveman6490
      @driveman6490 11 месяцев назад +34

      It's proprietary, but I've heard they only hire the best bowers and cuppers in the business.

    • @craigdutton6072
      @craigdutton6072 11 месяцев назад +7

      Lol iv had some flat stock door jambs my wife returned home with they had a twist like a propeller lol 😂

    • @somethinburnin
      @somethinburnin 11 месяцев назад +11

      My buddy spent over 3K there on 2x's for a 12x16 Sugar Shack. Had to sort A LOT of board to find something workable.
      I spent $3750 and bought a Woodmizer LX25 and a 15 pack of blades. Guess who got better lumber with 23 Acres of mature NNY white pine and Hemlock :)

    • @clintonadrian4958
      @clintonadrian4958 11 месяцев назад +9

      Easy! They put them inside a warm and dry building in a tight pile so that only the top layer dries very quickly and the underside of the board stays moist thus warping! They also take measures to make sure that every board in the pile warps by selling to customers who only want two or three boards at a time ! There you go!

  • @swillk1
    @swillk1 Год назад +87

    Great video Nate! I can only image the size of the maintenance crew that it takes to keep all this specialized machinery running. Great insight into the process.

  • @mattreynolds8741
    @mattreynolds8741 Год назад +4

    I drive by this mill every day on my way to and from work. I love watching action in the yard from mornings to nights. Roseburg is a great town, I could have lived any were in the US and have but I chose Roseburg over all of them. Roseburg Forest Products is great company with such a high standard. Thank you Essential Craftsman for making this video for people that are not from Rosebuurg.

  • @stevevandermeer1958
    @stevevandermeer1958 Год назад +2

    I was raised in Arcata, California in the 50's and 60's. I've seen my share of logging trucks and breathed the wood ash from the "tee pee" burners. I was 16years old and my dad's friend who worked at a mill that produced two by fours, got me a summer job called, "pulling on the green chain". After all, cutting to size and grading, we would pull the lumber off the green chain, called this because the lumber was still wet and very heavy. Four of us would pull, stack, band and the loader would take it away to the yard where it would "air" dry. Acres and acres of lumber stacked 20 feet tall. Real hard work. What a great learning experience, and I made a few bucks also. Watching this video and seeing how much the computer has changed the process for the better is amazing. Now, if we can just get all the tree huggers and politicians out of this industry it will be even better. By the way, my little brother hauled logs out of the Redding area to the mills on the coast, sometimes only two loads a day because of the distance. Up at 3am home at 7pm, tough job.

  • @mytubebobbie06h
    @mytubebobbie06h 7 месяцев назад

    There’s just something special about a sawmill.

  • @mechanicspecial
    @mechanicspecial Год назад +6

    After helping to build several sawmills in Oregon, my grandfather, Dennis Allen, worked to build the "original" Douglas County mill in the mid-50's, then went to work there, eventually retiring in the late 1970's.
    I teach wood shop at Hamlin M.S. in Springfield and will use this video to show students how lumber is produced. Now if you could do another video showing how plywood is made...
    Great videos, and proud that you are from my hometown! Thank you!

  • @countrycraftsman5110
    @countrycraftsman5110 Год назад +3

    I have been wiring sawmills for 40 years as a construction electrician.
    And i am still impressed with the whole system.
    The innovations just since I started have been amazing.

  • @joshhannaford2382
    @joshhannaford2382 Год назад +7

    Appreciate the video. My dad has been a sawmiller for 37 years in the south. Brings back a lot of good memories of when I used to help him. Especially walking on the wood sawmill floor

  • @rjtumble
    @rjtumble Год назад +30

    Nate, cool tour. Towards the end, when there were guys sorting the boards, do you remember (if you asked) why they were flipping some of them over? It was amazing that they'd be able to discern anything about the boards, given how fast they were moving.

    • @frankenz66
      @frankenz66 Год назад +32

      Checking for the number, and size of knots to the foot. Experience speeds your judgment skills up. I have worked in both hardwood and softwood mills and can vouch for that. In the 1980's I worked in an oak sawmill setting. I was the preliminary grader and stacker. The owner hired a college degreed lumber grader to grade after me in the evening. I was a relative newbie at 19, but he paid that guy a lot of money to pull out maybe 2 to 3 boards I had missed out of an entire semi-load of lumber stacks. The reason they did that was because the company that bought his A-grade lumber would lower to the B- grade price on an entire stack of lumber if ONE board was below the grade it was supposed to be.

  • @ctdieselnut
    @ctdieselnut Год назад +14

    Thx for the tour. Places like this are wonders of the industrial world. Its what allows stick framing to cost what it does, and go up as fast as they do, and not 3+ times longer/more expensive.
    Those forklifts that unload a whole semi in one bite are impressive too. Must feel like the king of the world operating something that powerful.

    • @jacobmiller5834
      @jacobmiller5834 6 месяцев назад

      Have you seen that video where during unloading somebody's log truck gets flipped?

  • @mackfisher4487
    @mackfisher4487 Год назад +13

    Thanks Nate, excellent video it makes me think of trees as a blessing to us and with proper management will continue support and house our families.

  • @beven4852
    @beven4852 7 месяцев назад

    Called on this mill for many years. Met a lot of great people. Lee is one of the best!

  • @motorcitymadman146
    @motorcitymadman146 6 месяцев назад

    This is a serious mill. Big Big bucks.

  • @patricksalter5412
    @patricksalter5412 Год назад +7

    My wife and I moved up to Myrtle Creek in 2015. Drove by the mills MANY times and often thought how much fun it would be to get a tour. We moved back to Southern California to be closer to our kids. What happened next was taking that tour with you guys! Thanks for that. Now a tour of the plywood mill out past Riddle would make another great video, lol. BTW, we were there for the open house of the spec house. Good times.

  • @86FxBdyCpe
    @86FxBdyCpe 7 месяцев назад

    Anyone from Maine here? My father whose currently 86 used to work in a sawmill (during summer vacation) in Rangeley as a teenager, then graduated to hauling logs out of Rangeley and the surrounding towns down to the pulp mills in Livermore Falls, Jay, Rumford and a toothpick factory in Farmington (I think). He used to tell me a lot of these stories from back in the day.

  • @mosheshpinel3108
    @mosheshpinel3108 6 месяцев назад

    This video brought back memories. In the early 70s, I worked the stud mill at Gustina Brothers lumber in Eugene, OR; 5, ten hour days. I pulled and stacked studs and occasionally graded them. When the forests were shut down in the summer, I swept the whole yard, dug out bark from under a packed debarker deck, and cleaned under the log peeler building. In the winter I also pull Dry Chain, veneer that came out of the dryer.

  • @dannysulyma6273
    @dannysulyma6273 Год назад +3

    Seeing the efficiencies of a large mill does make it easy to see how my one man band mill cannot compete on price. I spend more time with each board then they spend on a whole trees worth of logs.

  • @davelarsen9847
    @davelarsen9847 28 дней назад

    Amazing. I can't get my head around how they use wet steam to "dry" lumber, but the whole process is so self-contained! It's cool beans.

  • @JohnSmith-lv8xk
    @JohnSmith-lv8xk Год назад

    The best place I've ever worked !! You don't know what you have until it's gone.

  • @davidhaynes3126
    @davidhaynes3126 16 дней назад

    I liked the double band saw set up.

  • @Z-Bart
    @Z-Bart Год назад

    I've lived right next to a lumber mill for 25 years. Love them guys and gals.

  • @NElj-yq9qi
    @NElj-yq9qi Год назад +2

    My Father as a young child worked in a mill loading the slabs into the boiler. This mill cut, dried, milled, graded, and used everything they produced. The owner built windows, doors, trim, and specialty radius mouldings and trim. When the owners son took over he took out the boiler and installed 2 500 hp diesel motors to replace the boiler. The cost of the fuel bankrupted the business shortly after installed.

  • @alecharper515
    @alecharper515 10 месяцев назад

    Watched this before my morning dog walk. I remember touring this part of Oregon. Beautiful country. What a clean and impressive operation. I now have even more respect for what goes into making a 2x4 and shall never complain about lumber prices again! Thanks for posting this.

  • @donaldgarmon7368
    @donaldgarmon7368 Год назад +24

    Thanks Nate for another great and informative video! It would also be interesting to your viewers to see a tour of a plywood mill if there is one close by. It is good for people to know how the products in our homes and buildings are made. Thanks Again, and "Keep Up Your Good Work!"

    • @9HighFlyer9
      @9HighFlyer9 8 месяцев назад

      My grandfather was a millwright at a plywood mill for a couple decades. He took me on a tour a couple times.

  • @marcusayala6933
    @marcusayala6933 6 месяцев назад

    Damn bruh the beat at the beginning is insane 🔥🔥

  • @will6258
    @will6258 11 месяцев назад +3

    Such a phenomenal video. Would love to see other areas within the field of construction materials that are being produced in such a sustainable way. Thanks for the great content.

  • @wranther
    @wranther 7 месяцев назад

    Very nice, informative, and enjoyable video! Thank You! -Bob...

  • @ronaldkovacs7080
    @ronaldkovacs7080 7 месяцев назад

    A renewable resource that provides the energy used to process it. Total green!

  • @peterwhite7428
    @peterwhite7428 10 месяцев назад

    Great video. Great fiddle music. Old time. Love it

  • @PaulMikna
    @PaulMikna Год назад +3

    The machinery used to do all this is just amazing! Thanks for sharing this tour with us!

  • @RossNanfito
    @RossNanfito Год назад

    Best sawmill tour ever. Ever! And I've seen them all.

  • @284Winchester
    @284Winchester 11 месяцев назад

    My dad worked in a plywood mill for about 20 years. Thanks for this video.

  • @slpeteyAZ
    @slpeteyAZ Год назад

    My Grandpa worked his whole life at a sawmill in Heber, AZ. What a cool video.

  • @hansangb
    @hansangb Год назад

    Whole new appreciation for the old 2X4's. Wow

  • @EightWheelsRollin
    @EightWheelsRollin Год назад +1

    What a great video! Living in Washington State, this really hits home for me. Logging was/is such a big part of the economy and area I grew up in. Thanks!

  • @ackack612
    @ackack612 Месяц назад

    THAT was informative and interesting. Well done.

  • @katieprince7954
    @katieprince7954 Год назад +1

    I drove log trk an dumped lots at DCFP a user friendly mill!! Love the mill employees Great video

  • @gradyshades6535
    @gradyshades6535 Год назад

    You did a great job with this Nate, your enthusiasm is infectious, your sense of when to speak and when to observe is very appreciated. Your “good work” is showing, keep it up. Thanks.

  • @dalerounds4036
    @dalerounds4036 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great video of a modern sawmill in action! 40 years in the building trades and just recently toured a domtar stud mill in Canada. Amazing how much automation and science goes into the lumber making of today!

  • @geckosethpe
    @geckosethpe Год назад +1

    great video!
    the sawmill process is amazing to see it run on a scale this large.

  • @LifeontheMoose
    @LifeontheMoose Год назад +4

    Awesome video. Living near sawmills for the last 30 years, I thought I knew more! Good stuff.

  • @michealdchastain3637
    @michealdchastain3637 Год назад

    Such a wonderful thing to see!
    Having been raised in a logging/milling family (between Valasetz and Willamina), it still amazes me!

  • @twestgard2
    @twestgard2 Год назад +3

    I live in the Yellowwood forest area in southern Indiana. We have very little softwoods like you have. Ours is all hardwoods. Interesting to see how much is the same and what’s different.

  • @dabruscar
    @dabruscar Год назад

    This is absolutely fabulous. My kind of heaven. Thank you so much Nate.

  • @rhohoho
    @rhohoho Год назад

    So cool! Thanks for the inside look.

  • @JohnSmith-hq4qx
    @JohnSmith-hq4qx 5 месяцев назад

    One of the best places I have ever worked.

  • @brianteunessen85
    @brianteunessen85 Год назад

    Very cool ! Thanks for the tour

  • @user-ny7ro5vb9t
    @user-ny7ro5vb9t 7 месяцев назад

    This is so amazing! I am in awe.

  • @inthefiber5097
    @inthefiber5097 Год назад +1

    Great video! I worked at a Lumber Yard out of High School and unloaded so many of these lumber packs from Railcars. It was a good job for a young guy. Most of our Lumber was Canadian if I recall correctly.

  • @MattsAwesomeStuff
    @MattsAwesomeStuff Год назад

    Top 5 videos you've ever made. Well done Nate.

  • @vasuhardeo1418
    @vasuhardeo1418 Год назад +1

    wow, this was an awesome vid, thx for sharing the process

  • @battlegalaxy3246
    @battlegalaxy3246 Год назад

    Totally cool! Great tour and education, Nate

  • @erichill5208
    @erichill5208 Год назад +1

    Very interesting video. A behind the scenes look at how a tree a log becomes lumber. I like mechanical machinery and the entire saw mill process is fascinating 👍

  • @brianpiganelli6674
    @brianpiganelli6674 Год назад

    Thanks Nate, I really like the tour, and keep up the good work!

  • @williamparker6649
    @williamparker6649 Год назад

    This is an incredible and educational video! Thank you!

  • @davidmatke248
    @davidmatke248 Год назад +2

    Keep up the good work!

  • @Gzus
    @Gzus Год назад +1

    That was really cool! So neat that those boards were created so close to where you live!

  • @jonathanhansen1222
    @jonathanhansen1222 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video! One of the best I've seen on the milling process. Great work, guys!

  • @shaunybonny688
    @shaunybonny688 Год назад

    Fascinating video. Amazing operation.

  • @michaelcarroll991
    @michaelcarroll991 Год назад

    Love hearing more from you nate.

  • @mikenorton62
    @mikenorton62 Год назад

    Enjoyable video! Thanks

  • @niveknospmoht8743
    @niveknospmoht8743 6 месяцев назад

    Always enjoy watching videos like this

  • @fuegoman45
    @fuegoman45 11 месяцев назад

    Super fascinating. Thanks Nate!! 🤙

  • @jacobmiller5834
    @jacobmiller5834 6 месяцев назад

    Great job on the production. Humans are amazing. Would have been cool to touch on maintenance and also the economic ups and downs.

  • @CHenry1951
    @CHenry1951 Год назад

    Excellent, it really opens one's eyes to how lumber gets made......pretty impressive.... Thanks

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 Год назад

    Much appreciation for a really great video!

  • @Windh1984
    @Windh1984 2 месяца назад

    Wow amazing they use all of the tree to run the plant and make the product, even electricity. Thank you for sharing.

  • @patkcorcoran
    @patkcorcoran 11 месяцев назад

    Will need every board for the next hurricane.

  • @chrisbarr1359
    @chrisbarr1359 Год назад

    Truly Fascinating.

  • @Timothylaing
    @Timothylaing Год назад

    This is the best tour of a saw mill I have seen. Amazing. Going to share with my students

  • @arthuresparza2617
    @arthuresparza2617 Год назад

    Very cool video, really geeked out on the entire sawmill process! Keep it up!

  • @kylemanausa2315
    @kylemanausa2315 Год назад

    Very cool to see that operation!

  • @erikpearson5310
    @erikpearson5310 2 месяца назад

    Amazing video thank you so much!

  • @bobkat1663
    @bobkat1663 Год назад

    Great show, love seeing lumber mills.

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Год назад +1

    Love your work 👍

  • @dwats250
    @dwats250 5 месяцев назад

    I've always loved your channel. But as a saw filer, this one is especially awesome. Thanks for sharing!!

  • @chipperkeithmgb
    @chipperkeithmgb Год назад

    That’s really amazing

  • @rustyshackleford5060
    @rustyshackleford5060 Год назад +1

    Keep up the good work

  • @mikelongo4689
    @mikelongo4689 Год назад

    Very Cool. Great job!

  • @LateThenN
    @LateThenN Год назад

    Great video, should definitely do more this style

  • @billk8780
    @billk8780 Год назад

    Absolutely super video!

  • @phooesnax
    @phooesnax Год назад

    Thank You. Nice job

  • @RJM1011
    @RJM1011 11 месяцев назад

    Great to see thank you for the video.

  • @jeffreyspilker2209
    @jeffreyspilker2209 Год назад

    I love watching this kind of content thanks

  • @jetenginethrust863
    @jetenginethrust863 11 месяцев назад

    Cool video, thanks for sharing.👍

  • @johngoold1218
    @johngoold1218 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic video. Seen sawmills in the hills above my town for years and now I understand what the "WigWam" burner was that we'd see on our way to the snow. Nice to see what they do today.

  • @davidhaynes3126
    @davidhaynes3126 16 дней назад

    I get your point regarding the efficiencies from burning bark, it’s cool. Like why not ? but smart folks started making steam for operations years ago.
    The wigwams buddy’s talking about, for sure existed because building co-generation systems aren’t sawing lumber / peeling veneer.

  • @johnschiltz6440
    @johnschiltz6440 Год назад

    Mesmerizing! I thought "how interesting could this be?" but it was fascinating. I kept repeating the part where they were sorting the boards by pulling them out and I was wondering how that worked.Turns out by pulling the board over it reaches a point where it tips off the line. So dang cool.

  • @tylermundy7985
    @tylermundy7985 Год назад

    Super interesting! Great video

  • @markpalmer5311
    @markpalmer5311 Год назад

    Excellent video, really interesting

  • @gtbkts
    @gtbkts Год назад

    Thanks for the awesome content and great video!!

  • @CPaulCounts
    @CPaulCounts Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @craig8739
    @craig8739 Год назад

    Awesome!!!! Great Video!!

  • @UndercoverFerret404
    @UndercoverFerret404 Год назад

    Really great video and impressive sawmill !

  • @beadmachine1
    @beadmachine1 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome video! Need more Like it...

  • @Nyllsor
    @Nyllsor Год назад

    Very intresting! Always wanted to see this. Great filming, interviewing and editing!

  • @lheigert
    @lheigert Год назад

    Great video, i live in the Great Northwest and pass lumber mills often, nice to learn more about what they do

  • @joyona7430
    @joyona7430 Год назад

    WOW!!!!! THANK YOU!!!! BRILLIANT!!!!

  • @barrysupernaw
    @barrysupernaw Год назад

    Finally, I get to see the guy who puts all those staples in the 2 bys...you KNOW what I'm talking about.
    Cool video though.

  • @kevincorbin6273
    @kevincorbin6273 Год назад

    This brings me back, I went on a field trip to Weyerhaeuser in Washington state when I was a Cub Scout