Does the wolf ridge have any sort of adjustment for length? Looks like about 6 or 7 inches of travel before you hit the wood. I don't think some people realize just how much work goes into making good firewood that is dry and not half mucky on the outside.
@@DanielAtkinsFirewood I've never seen that function in any other wolf ridge videos either. I always thought it didn't matter much with a machine that had a fast cycle time. For some reason though, it looked in this video like that unused travel time was really slowing things down.
it doesn't. I tend to cut wood at 16" but the splitter has 24" stroke so yes there's some lost productivity if the ram retracts full stroke. if I have a good stack on the lift table and I can keep up with it, I'll stop the ram before it returns and that saves some time.
The trees are coming
I just found more trees that are down today
Does the wolf ridge have any sort of adjustment for length? Looks like about 6 or 7 inches of travel before you hit the wood. I don't think some people realize just how much work goes into making good firewood that is dry and not half mucky on the outside.
I know my Wolfe Ridge doesn't have this adjustment..
@@DanielAtkinsFirewood I've never seen that function in any other wolf ridge videos either. I always thought it didn't matter much with a machine that had a fast cycle time. For some reason though, it looked in this video like that unused travel time was really slowing things down.
it doesn't. I tend to cut wood at 16" but the splitter has 24" stroke so yes there's some lost productivity if the ram retracts full stroke. if I have a good stack on the lift table and I can keep up with it, I'll stop the ram before it returns and that saves some time.
@@FlatCreekOutdoors Seems like something Chris could sell as maybe an add-on to sleeve for the ram.