Interesting results, I really didn't expect the 6m to be such a better deal, but maybe that's the tradeoff between handling time vs ease of cut and ship
These are some nice results, i also thougth it was on weight. What im also curious about is the woodchips. Then the size doesnt matter but maybe 1 tree gives more chips than the other.
Interesting thing about Sequoia. Despite its large size and what looks like it would make really good wood. It absolutely doesn’t. People tried. They cut down a few and found that the wood was only really good for making toothpicks.
Soo going off of your results for lodgepole and ponderosa it shows 6m being most profitable on easy dev trees but using the harvester the 9m were the most profitable. Why does that make the difference? Soo in game if im harvesting trees grown by the map does this mean i would be more profitable with a 9m length? Thank you. I am currently falling mostly lodgepole and ponderosa on a grade, yarding them up to the landing, and then using a processor to delimb and cut to length
Something i noticed was most full growth are a 35m tree. Deducting the stump portion i get 3 X 11m cuts with maybe .5m garbage to mulch. Was interested why you left 10m and 11m out of your tree harvester test.
@@FarmerCop hi ive scrolled through the tree saplings as shown in the video but there not showing at all and i do own the platinum edition there not showing at all the ones listed that show up are spruce, downyservice berry, cypress american elm shagbark hickory pagoda dogwood ,maple ,willow,oak,birch,stone pine and pine thats all :)
I was under the impression also that the containers for logs give more but also want a specific length or it tanks the price. Not sure if you've done that before or not, also the stone pine I know can only be chain sawed cut.
I dont think people understand math sometimes!😅. Seems like you get the most money the smaller the cut. Do the math. Example from your chart was 1 meter worth 198$ but 24 meter was 3460$. Simple math if this chart is correct. 198 x 24 = 4752$. So the smaller the log, the more profit you can get per tree.. more work, but if we talking about the most profit from a tree, it with be cutting it in 1 meters. I just starting playing this game again, but every video ive seen about the best log sizes always seems to miss comparing how many you can get out of 1 tree.
Interesting results, I really didn't expect the 6m to be such a better deal, but maybe that's the tradeoff between handling time vs ease of cut and ship
These are some nice results, i also thougth it was on weight. What im also curious about is the woodchips. Then the size doesnt matter but maybe 1 tree gives more chips than the other.
Thanks for this video. I was about to put the work in to figure it out myself. Looking forward to you and mr sealy p in 25
you are the man for testing great job
I thought the weight of each log would be the biggest factor in price
Interesting thing about Sequoia.
Despite its large size and what looks like it would make really good wood.
It absolutely doesn’t.
People tried. They cut down a few and found that the wood was only really good for making toothpicks.
Soo going off of your results for lodgepole and ponderosa it shows 6m being most profitable on easy dev trees but using the harvester the 9m were the most profitable. Why does that make the difference? Soo in game if im harvesting trees grown by the map does this mean i would be more profitable with a 9m length? Thank you. I am currently falling mostly lodgepole and ponderosa on a grade, yarding them up to the landing, and then using a processor to delimb and cut to length
So most profitable would be 11m ponderosa? Loved the test and data sheets are my favorite!
Spruce type 1 vs 2?
What about if you're using the sawmill? Does the type of tree matter and log length matter at all or is just the volume of the wood?
Volume is all that matters
@@FarmerCop great thanks. I appreciate your videos.
We need a tree harvester for stone pines because I planted way to many
Interesting test! New thumb of rule, cut logs to 6m.
Something i noticed was most full growth are a 35m tree. Deducting the stump portion i get 3 X 11m cuts with maybe .5m garbage to mulch. Was interested why you left 10m and 11m out of your tree harvester test.
Another interesting fact is the stage before is 25m usually and that gives 2 X 11m cuts
#FS22 #Test another great test by the Chief 🤪
Sad he proved me wrong... I knew 6M were better than 12M but I didn't think it was that bad.
is this a mod? to get those trees i own the platinum expansion but those trees aren't listed the pine ones shown in the video
If you have platinum everything in this video is part of that
@@FarmerCop hi ive scrolled through the tree saplings as shown in the video but there not showing at all and i do own the platinum edition there not showing at all the ones listed that show up are spruce, downyservice berry, cypress american elm shagbark hickory pagoda dogwood ,maple ,willow,oak,birch,stone pine and pine thats all :)
I know this is old but did you enable the dlc before starting the save?
I was under the impression also that the containers for logs give more but also want a specific length or it tanks the price. Not sure if you've done that before or not, also the stone pine I know can only be chain sawed cut.
I dont think people understand math sometimes!😅. Seems like you get the most money the smaller the cut. Do the math. Example from your chart was 1 meter worth 198$ but 24 meter was 3460$. Simple math if this chart is correct. 198 x 24 = 4752$. So the smaller the log, the more profit you can get per tree.. more work, but if we talking about the most profit from a tree, it with be cutting it in 1 meters. I just starting playing this game again, but every video ive seen about the best log sizes always seems to miss comparing how many you can get out of 1 tree.
Did they fix the atone pine yet
Its not broken, it works the way they intended
It's because the limbs of stone pine and giant sequoia are too large for a harvester to delimb them.
They dont have 2 best ones anymore