This giant pine log was tough on my small tractor. Follow us on Facebook!: / falllineridg. . Music from www.epidemicsound.com Contact: falllineridge@gmail.com
Some good looking lumber going to come out of that fall. You could drag lifting only one end. Also connect your chain closer to the 3 point to left heavy loads and if you are still getting front end lift move your load in reverse it will put the front end back on the ground. Great project post up when your table is finished . Awesome video
That was one of your best videos so far! I can’t wait to see the upgrades you make to your mill. I hope you film everything. The rooster popping his head up in the back of your truck was hilarious.
Pretty wood, love pine. I have two sets of pine shelves that I finished when I was 15, I am 63 now. The color of the aged wood is beautiful. Dark golden brown with a hint of red in it. Love pine.
@@TallCanDan02 you do realize that most boomers are dead. Yer probably talking to a gen xer. So dont disrespect people just because you want to be an ass.
@@thuss5162 _you_ survived. Those who didn't aren't here anymore to tell you you're wrong. And there are plenty who didn't. Go to any cemetery older than 100 years, and make a list of all the graves' birth year and age at death. In excel make a scatterplot with the year of birth on the x-scale, and age at y. You'll notice a lot of people with lower age at death in the past. But yeah, you survived. That's some fine survivor's bias you're showing there.
From log to table. The slabs leaning against your truck looks like a beautiful table to me. When you get it done please share. Great videos. I enjoy them very much
That heavy log wouldn't be nearly as difficult to lift if you didn't use the longest fulcrum point on your lift boom! You obviously never attended "farmboy 101 class". If you lift using a point CLOSER to the tractor on the boom, you can lift a lot more weight. Adding temporary counterweight to the front of the tractor will help as well.
I have a 2015 LT40. With experience, I simplified even more. The height of my mill is two inches lower than the height of my trailer that I haul me logs on (22' 17,500# deck over axles). This provides me a very slight down ramp, perfect really. I adapted the steel log ramps that came with the mill to hook onto the edge rail the the trailer. I no longer off load my trailer to log decks (well very rarely) only to move them again to the mill. I pull the trailer up to the mill(takes a few minutes to get it aligned right), hook up the ramps, and roll the first log onto the mill. Easy-peasy as they say. I have an 8,000# Ramsy winch at the front of the trailer I use with a snatch block to slide the logs forward or back to align with the steel ramps. Once I am about halfway through sawing the logs on the trailer, I move the remaining logs closest to the side facing the mill. Then I start loading the lumber on the backside of the trailer. When I am done, the trailer is ready to drop off the lumber in stacks or go to delivery. I'm a one-man operation which means I only have one back and one man's time to do everything. This setup saves may back and a ton of time, not to mention wear and tear on my other equipment.
Gotta love those old Ford 3,000 tractors we had one when i was a young lad. You certainly pushed it to the limit but they are tough and can take it. Those boards at the end of this show exactly why having your own bandmill is worth every penny it cost. It would not take many boards like those to pay for a mill. Nice job filming this i would certainly hire you as a cameraman for sure. Turning out to be a pretty darn good sawyer also.
I would make a log deck out of 6 x 6 maybe 10 to 12 feet long then put your ramps leading up to it. I would make the deck about an inch or two above the sawing deck , that should make loading the logs onto the saw deck much easier
Richard Simpson The scary part was the extra 3 feet of the log that needed to be cut into two pieces to make it safe. If he would have made one cut he would have had that scary 36 inch log that could have been sawn up and used in all sorts of ways.
That’s a big pile of fire wood. See MAN about TOOLS for really neat jig for cutting up all your slab wood into kindling and fire wood. Great video as always, love your multiple camera mounting positions. Looking forward to the ramp project.
That's a very nice milling machine. Those planks sure are nice and solid and Heavy, Like the famous line from the movie Jaws, "You're going to need a bigger boat", well, "You're going to need a bigger tractor", lol
I only recently discovered your channel and now, I've watched three or four of your videos. I love to watch milling, and your programs are great. Compliments on your camerawork, framing and editing. Can't say the same for most YT videos. You should give lessons.
Thanks. Takes me back to when I visited back woods mills in North Florida (about 68 years ago). Of course, those mills used the old style saw blades 4 or 5 feet in diameter.
@All the arseholes tossing out names regarding this video. The man isn't a disgrace, or propagator of clickbait or etc... He's new at the game. That has value in itself. If he's still at it in 10 years, he'll go back and see what he's changed with that much more experience. I give credit for him trying a trade that is difficult at the best of times. @Fall Line Ridge : I've been at this type of thing for over 30 years... Make yourself a list of things you need for your mill. On the top of that list put a front end loader for your tractor. Second thing that should be on your list is a skidway for the logs prior to the mill. Third is a rack for your slabs (not the boards or lumber. I mean the offcuts). Nobody makes money walking slabs that far. Process the slabs as close to the mill as possible. In the mean time. A log that is too large for the tractor should be skidded. Yeah its going to pick up sand and stones but, a blade is far less expensive than an axle for a Ford 3000. Cut yourself a pair of 6x6x16 or 6x8x16 and lay them in on a slope upto the mill. Until you get a loader for your tractor, roll your logs up that slope. Smaller stuff can be loaded from the other side. Good luck from an oldtimer that broke the code.
Other saw millers have stated dragging logs on the ground embeds stones and dirt in the log, Some also debark the log before milling to save the blade from cutting into the dirt and stones in the bark after dragging. The area where you have your mill set looks like you have the room, you can use the tractor to pull the logs up the ramp, using a winch is one more expense and one more thing to break down.
You could have gotten the whole log on your mill with a few old timers tricks. You could have dragged it into mplace beside the mill, placed poles between the log and propped them on the mill. Go around the opposite side and rolled it up the ramp using a chain wrapped around the log. That is how they got large logs onto wagons.
I moved a 1,300lb white oak log about 40ft up a 10% grade using a crowbar and wedges - the log was 7ft long and massively bigger at the butt end - about 26" v 20" at the small end, so really awkward to roll. I had rolled it about 60ft far using my truck and a 100ft chain wrapped around it, but in the end using the crowbar and wedges was actually easier.
I think it takes courage and humility to post a video of yourself doing something where there might be a better way to do it - then conclude with the lessons learned and how you might do it differently next time. That's how you learn and improve in life. The gaggle of RUclips 'armchair experts' (who are obviously perfect) might want to ponder this thought prior to commenting. Thank you for the video and I enjoyed it immensely. Greetings from downunder.
Or, he could have backed oriented the log perpendicular to the tractor and hooked it to the loop half way along the boom. Much less leverage to lift the front end.
I regularly load 16 ft logs of that diameter with my small tractor. I simply lift the large end a few inches and drag the log to the mill over the leaf mast. I then use the forks to lift the large end slightly over the mill bed. Use a short chain to secure the log in this position, release the forks and lift the other end to the mill bed, again securing the log to the mill. I then release pressure of the forks and roll/push the log into the desired location. Set dogs and remove chain to complete the log raising. Works for me. The leaf mast prevents rocks and dirt from coating the log.
Very nice video! The drone footage was great too! In Aviation I have a saying “You must know your limitations” you may have learned one of yours with the current technique of moving timber. You produce some wonderful videos and I enjoy watching the rewards you reap from all the hard work you do. I just wish I could be there to smell the saw dust. Living in West Texas I can do all my milling on a 17 inch band saw. I grew up back east where we have trees. Here we have mesquite bushes, they get pretty big. I have milled a few of the logs but I have not found a good use for it other than fire wood.
One problem is that you are using your tractor to drag the log. Next time, slightly raise (12") the front end of the log by attaching it to the tractor boom, then attach a skid board under the rear end of the log, the tractor will then be able to pull the log to its destination. Second, once the log is parallel to the saw mill's bed, attach two large skid boards outward from the saws bed to the ground where you have the log waiting to be milled, then place the tractor on the opposit side of the bed and attach a come-a-long from the raised tractor boom (max height) to the log and bring the log onto the saw's bed by pulling it onto the saw's bed using the come-a-long. Hope this helps.
WOW. Nice grain there. It should be real nice for your home when its all cut & dried. I got an ol international tractor and Benningtons is right. If you hook on to it with half your boom you could have got the whole log. None the less. that tracktor you had. lol. The rear tiers were almost flat. You really scored with those pine logs though. Nice work man.
I belong to a sawmill club, and we have both a log deck and a complex pulley system that will lift logs like you handled with ease. "Give me a lever, and I'll lift the world."
The heart wood is only good for 4x4 to stack on. Helps relieve the stress in the lumber, couple of boards flip until you end up with 4 by 4 most of those wide planks you will need to split as they will cup.
I help my neighbour and we lowered the deck to about a 1' off the ground and put ramps / rails so logs can be rolled up. Yes keep gravel and dirt off the bark. We sometime pressure wash the logs first. Hang a bucket under the sawdust chute. After each log dump the bucket away from the side of your mill, a bit safer and easier to keep clean. Nice clear wood though.
Awesome job I know how it is working with the boom lift. I have had to use the closer lifting point on the boom closer to the lift arms for heavier loads. It doesn't lift as high but it does help put more weight on the front axle. keep on a tractoring and a cutting!!
New to your channel. I watched a few older videos on your LT10. Very impressed with your attention to detail. Great camera angles!! I also scrolled through the rest of your videos. Great variety!! I am interested in a Wood Mizer sawmill. I’ll be asking you a few questions! I SUBSCRIBED!! Chris in MN.
I also have a LT-10 with 3 rails so I can cut 16' logs. That blade lever is a weak point. After 30 logs It broke the link. So after replacing the part, I gently press the blade engage lever on and off. Other then that I have milled several large logs into lumber. I am not sure why you have it up so high in the air.
How bout a log deck? I made ramps and used my truck at first too pull the logs up on to the mill. I am on my 3rd winch from harbor freight beautiful wood in the end, big wood = a lot of work good luck on your winch project if I can help just ask I am more than glad to help you if I can I learned a few things making mine
Yep, that's exactly what I'm thinking of doing. Just like the system on yours and the ones Wood Mizer uses on the portable manual mills. Appreciate it, Larry. I might ask for some tips when the time comes, I really like your mill.
Invest in an old dually truck, 1 ton or heavier. put a lift boom on it. well worth the effort, and you`ll find use for it more than you think. nice video, nice job on the planks. those telling you about the board you "wasted" forgot about the two inch log taper. skin cuts usually don`t yield much leftover.
You'd better copyright that Can't Cam!!! Great video! I had a tree service drop 30 loblolly pine logs that looked like this one, but with sap pouring out. Beautiful wood.
@@jamesspears5127 I used Dawn dish soap in the blade cooling water, but still sap all over the bunks and non-moving parts from my gloves. I'm going to try Pinesol in the water and in the machine cleanup. Thanks!
Just a couple of ideas to throw around. Just new to your channel but noticed that you don,t wear gloves when handling the timber, maybe a cheap pair would be better than nothing. Also, a piece of wood the width of the black stabilizer posts could be screwed to the side of the wooden rails which would keep you from having to get them from underneath the mill rails on the ground and off the the dirt. Finally, that ramp hopefully is not far away to help you put the logs on the mill easier. Not sure of your first name, but i really like your channel mate!!!! All the very best for your future milling endeavors and look forward to your videos.
try putting one end of the log on the mill , chain loosely so it can rotate with out binding , pick up other end and rotate it on to mill i have done this in the past , it will work in a pinch till you get more lifting capacity
I built a 3 point hitch forklift. If you have wet lines, you can use them along with the mast from an old forklift to raise, lower & tilt. Poor man's front end forked loader!
I remember sawing my first log. It felt dangerous. Of course it was on a home made mill and the log was a 24 inch ash that i had to roll up the ramps via can't hook. But i can see how milling soft wood on a woodmizer is dangerous for sure.
You should watch a couple of Matthew Cremona's videos. He uses a winch cable around his logs to pull them up onto his trailer and sometimes onto his mill when they are really big.
it wasn't though, it was a sloppy lift, his boom is set wrong, it was how a hack hacks his way through some hack work... he managed to accomplish it against all odds doing it the worst way possible without hurting himself or breaking his equipment... that's not nicely done, that's a lucky sumbitch...
I have an Alaskan chainsaw mill attachment for my saw just for situations like yours. I can slab up the bigger logs and lift them onto my mill by cutting them down to a more manageable slab size for the tractor then mill them like normal. You spend a lot of time cutting with the chainsaw but save time on the mill and have considerably less length wastage.
That wood looks really nice! We're looking forward to seeing you make some Beautiful Furniture. Happy Milling!
Necessity is definitely the mother of invention. Nice boards too by the way. That pine smell is always nice when cutting fresh boards.
Some good looking lumber going to come out of that fall. You could drag lifting only one end. Also connect your chain closer to the 3 point to left heavy loads and if you are still getting front end lift move your load in reverse it will put the front end back on the ground. Great project post up when your table is finished . Awesome video
I love working in wood in my retirement; although those planks are bigger than I had in mind! Great presentation. Best wishes from Linslade, U.K.
Man, that is some beautiful pine! All that work makes it worthwhile.
Beautiful boards! You can`t find that good of lumber in the store!
Thanks for the videos.
That was one of your best videos so far! I can’t wait to see the upgrades you make to your mill. I hope you film everything. The rooster popping his head up in the back of your truck was hilarious.
Thanks for the great video!
Nice job getting the log on the mill! A case of the end justifying the means. 🙂
Pretty wood, love pine. I have two sets of pine shelves that I finished when I was 15, I am 63 now. The color of the aged wood is beautiful. Dark golden brown with a hint of red in it. Love pine.
When I was a kid and the tractor went nose up, pops just had me sit on the front of the tractor. Yes, I survived childhood.
Your pops knew exactly what he was doing: showing you you're able do much more than you may have thought. Good story!
We survived.
today the snowflakes are having a tough time coping with work
@@thuss5162 ok boomer
@@TallCanDan02 you do realize that most boomers are dead. Yer probably talking to a gen xer. So dont disrespect people just because you want to be an ass.
@@thuss5162 _you_ survived. Those who didn't aren't here anymore to tell you you're wrong. And there are plenty who didn't.
Go to any cemetery older than 100 years, and make a list of all the graves' birth year and age at death. In excel make a scatterplot with the year of birth on the x-scale, and age at y. You'll notice a lot of people with lower age at death in the past. But yeah, you survived. That's some fine survivor's bias you're showing there.
Good job! Those boards are beautiful!!
From log to table. The slabs leaning against your truck looks like a beautiful table to me. When you get it done please share. Great videos. I enjoy them very much
Thanks, Dale. Appreciate you watching.
That heavy log wouldn't be nearly as difficult to lift if you didn't use the longest fulcrum point on your lift boom! You obviously never attended "farmboy 101 class". If you lift using a point CLOSER to the tractor on the boom, you can lift a lot more weight. Adding temporary counterweight to the front of the tractor will help as well.
That's exactly what I thought.
Bingo!
Brian Wysoskey u
VAspeed3 j
I was going to point that out also. You could have moved the 8.5 ft. section easily by moving the suspension point 3 or 4 ft. closer to the tractor.
Beautiful log and slabs. I think I can smell that fresh cut pine all the way up here in southern Indiana. Great video.
I have a 2015 LT40. With experience, I simplified even more. The height of my mill is two inches lower than the height of my trailer that I haul me logs on (22' 17,500# deck over axles). This provides me a very slight down ramp, perfect really. I adapted the steel log ramps that came with the mill to hook onto the edge rail the the trailer. I no longer off load my trailer to log decks (well very rarely) only to move them again to the mill. I pull the trailer up to the mill(takes a few minutes to get it aligned right), hook up the ramps, and roll the first log onto the mill. Easy-peasy as they say. I have an 8,000# Ramsy winch at the front of the trailer I use with a snatch block to slide the logs forward or back to align with the steel ramps. Once I am about halfway through sawing the logs on the trailer, I move the remaining logs closest to the side facing the mill. Then I start loading the lumber on the backside of the trailer. When I am done, the trailer is ready to drop off the lumber in stacks or go to delivery. I'm a one-man operation which means I only have one back and one man's time to do everything. This setup saves may back and a ton of time, not to mention wear and tear on my other equipment.
Gotta love those old Ford 3,000 tractors we had one when i was a young lad. You certainly pushed it to the limit but they are tough and can take it. Those boards at the end of this show exactly why having your own bandmill is worth every penny it cost. It would not take many boards like those to pay for a mill. Nice job filming this i would certainly hire you as a cameraman for sure. Turning out to be a pretty darn good sawyer also.
Ken Jett It’s definitely a tough little tractor. Appreciate you stopping by as always, Ken. Thanks for the kind words too!
I would make a log deck out of 6 x 6 maybe 10 to 12 feet long then put your ramps leading up to it. I would make the deck about an inch or two above the sawing deck , that should make loading the logs onto the saw deck much easier
Beautiful wood! Scary process. Glad it all worked out. Peace and Good Fortune to you and your family.
I think I cant, I think I cant, I think I cant. Yay! Great job getting that beast up there and sliced into fine looking lumber!
Good video as always, looking forward to the ramp build, stay safe.
Wait until you get your hands on some hardwood.
sweet very good lumber, thanks for sharing!
23 years and we have tree pines and logs here in Brazil like these in U.S. Lobolly an Slash pine..we have here!Thanks sun !
Did they introduce those for reforestation? Very interesting!
AWESOME LOG! That mill and tractor got a good workout today. Well done.
Thanks, Mike!
Only hook halfway back on your boom pole will give you more leverage for lifting and won’t be as hard on the tractor. Nice log you have there 👍
Absolutely... done it many time with my 8N.
Yes , I agree and why is your saw so high ??¿ Leverage. That's working against ya too. Keep it up. Nice work
That’s what she said.
and if he had hooked 1/2 way back on the boom, he probably could have picked up the entire log without making 4 foot of it into firewood.
better solution---- lift one end up on mill chain loosely pick up other end pick it up swing onto mill
I love all the different angles of the video!! great editing!!
WOW, it's nuts that over a quarter million people watch wood milling in less than a month!
I must have sneezed and missed the Dangerous Part!
Agree. Also, most dangerous part was not wearing safety goggles, ear protection etc.
Richard Simpson The scary part was the extra 3 feet of the log that needed to be cut into two pieces to make it safe. If he would have made one cut he would have had that scary 36 inch log that could have been sawn up and used in all sorts of ways.
Musta been a helluva sneeze!
Clickbait...No PPE. Have there been any UTubers badly injured...anyone know the answer??
That’s a big pile of fire wood. See MAN about TOOLS for really neat jig for cutting up all your slab wood into kindling and fire wood. Great video as always, love your multiple camera mounting positions. Looking forward to the ramp project.
Watching an older video cutting 6' pine into 2" slabs. You've come a long way from that day!👍
That's a very nice milling machine. Those planks sure are nice and solid and Heavy, Like the famous line from the movie Jaws, "You're going to need a bigger boat", well, "You're going to need a bigger tractor", lol
I only recently discovered your channel and now, I've watched three or four of your videos. I love to watch milling, and your programs are great. Compliments on your camerawork, framing and editing. Can't say the same for most YT videos. You should give lessons.
Damn fine job on a brilliant machine.Lovely timber!
Nice pine , it will make a great looking table ..Great vid bud
Thanks. Takes me back to when I visited back woods mills in North Florida (about 68 years ago). Of course, those mills used the old style saw blades 4 or 5 feet in diameter.
@All the arseholes tossing out names regarding this video. The man isn't a disgrace, or propagator of clickbait or etc... He's new at the game. That has value in itself. If he's still at it in 10 years, he'll go back and see what he's changed with that much more experience. I give credit for him trying a trade that is difficult at the best of times.
@Fall Line Ridge : I've been at this type of thing for over 30 years... Make yourself a list of things you need for your mill. On the top of that list put a front end loader for your tractor. Second thing that should be on your list is a skidway for the logs prior to the mill. Third is a rack for your slabs (not the boards or lumber. I mean the offcuts). Nobody makes money walking slabs that far. Process the slabs as close to the mill as possible.
In the mean time. A log that is too large for the tractor should be skidded. Yeah its going to pick up sand and stones but, a blade is far less expensive than an axle for a Ford 3000. Cut yourself a pair of 6x6x16 or 6x8x16 and lay them in on a slope upto the mill. Until you get a loader for your tractor, roll your logs up that slope. Smaller stuff can be loaded from the other side.
Good luck from an oldtimer that broke the code.
FLR! Pioneers of the chainsaw cam!
We learned that you need a 24" lathe to make a couple of large pine bowls.
The wood looks beautiful. Nice job
Great Vid! Thanks for sharing!
Anyone who can dramatize the danger of sawing one cut log in a sawmill needs to be in Hollywood. Or on the damn internet. Good grief.
The guys doing his best
Other saw millers have stated dragging logs on the ground embeds stones and dirt in the log, Some also debark the log before milling to save the blade from cutting into the dirt and stones in the bark after dragging.
The area where you have your mill set looks like you have the room, you can use the tractor to pull the logs up the ramp, using a winch is one more expense and one more thing to break down.
Theoretically correct but never had that problem myself since I check for such before sawing.
I like all the different camera angles, good job!
That is some mighty fine looking slabs you cut on that portable mill.
You could have gotten the whole log on your mill with a few old timers tricks. You could have dragged it into mplace beside the mill, placed poles between the log and propped them on the mill. Go around the opposite side and rolled it up the ramp using a chain wrapped around the log. That is how they got large logs onto wagons.
hard yakka it’s an ancient technique called parbuckling.
I moved a 1,300lb white oak log about 40ft up a 10% grade using a crowbar and wedges - the log was 7ft long and massively bigger at the butt end - about 26" v 20" at the small end, so really awkward to roll. I had rolled it about 60ft far using my truck and a 100ft chain wrapped around it, but in the end using the crowbar and wedges was actually easier.
22 Dia pine 95 lbs a foot.
Great video, like the "saw cam"
I think it takes courage and humility to post a video of yourself doing something where there might be a better way to do it - then conclude with the lessons learned and how you might do it differently next time. That's how you learn and improve in life. The gaggle of RUclips 'armchair experts' (who are obviously perfect) might want to ponder this thought prior to commenting.
Thank you for the video and I enjoyed it immensely. Greetings from downunder.
Good job, really nice lumber! Be careful.
Shorten the boom and put weights on the front of you tracktor.
Or, he could have backed oriented the log perpendicular to the tractor and hooked it to the loop half way along the boom. Much less leverage to lift the front end.
My favorite scenes were with the Stealth Chicken. Please include more of the same. Love your log and slabs.
Beautiful wood! I hope you share pictures of the table when it’s finished.
I love that wood....keep up the good work.
Really beautiful pine Wes.
Great Plains Craftsman Thanks, Tim! Hope you’re staying warm out there.
I regularly load 16 ft logs of that diameter with my small tractor. I simply lift the large end a few inches and drag the log to the mill over the leaf mast. I then use the forks to lift the large end slightly over the mill bed. Use a short chain to secure the log in this position, release the forks and lift the other end to the mill bed, again securing the log to the mill. I then release pressure of the forks and roll/push the log into the desired location. Set dogs and remove chain to complete the log raising. Works for me.
The leaf mast prevents rocks and dirt from coating the log.
Very nice video! The drone footage was great too! In Aviation I have a saying “You must know your limitations” you may have learned one of yours with the current technique of moving timber. You produce some wonderful videos and I enjoy watching the rewards you reap from all the hard work you do. I just wish I could be there to smell the saw dust. Living in West Texas I can do all my milling on a 17 inch band saw.
I grew up back east where we have trees. Here we have mesquite bushes, they get pretty big. I have milled a few of the logs but I have not found a good use for it other than fire wood.
TheFalconJetDriver Appreciate it! Glad you enjoy the videos.
That’s an archaic Husky! I like it!
Beautiful!
One problem is that you are using your tractor to drag the log. Next time, slightly raise (12") the front end of the log by attaching it to the tractor boom, then attach a skid board under the rear end of the log, the tractor will then be able to pull the log to its destination. Second, once the log is parallel to the saw mill's bed, attach two large skid boards outward from the saws bed to the ground where you have the log waiting to be milled, then place the tractor on the opposit side of the bed and attach a come-a-long from the raised tractor boom (max height) to the log and bring the log onto the saw's bed by pulling it onto the saw's bed using the come-a-long. Hope this helps.
The Shadow Appreciate it!
WOW. Nice grain there. It should be real nice for your home when its all cut & dried. I got an ol international tractor and Benningtons is right. If you hook on to it with half your boom you could have got the whole log. None the less. that tracktor you had. lol. The rear tiers were almost flat. You really scored with those pine logs though. Nice work man.
I belong to a sawmill club, and we have both a log deck and a complex pulley system that will lift logs like you handled with ease. "Give me a lever, and I'll lift the world."
The drone footage is a nice addition to your videos.
The heart wood is only good for 4x4 to stack on. Helps relieve the stress in the lumber, couple of boards flip until you end up with 4 by 4 most of those wide planks you will need to split as they will cup.
I help my neighbour and we lowered the deck to about a 1' off the ground and put ramps / rails so logs can be rolled up.
Yes keep gravel and dirt off the bark. We sometime pressure wash the logs first.
Hang a bucket under the sawdust chute. After each log dump the bucket away from the side of your mill, a bit safer and easier to keep clean.
Nice clear wood though.
I've seen you mention blue stain a few times and a simple solution to that is to spray the log down so it doesn't dry out on you and start to stain.
Awesome job I know how it is working with the boom lift. I have had to use the closer lifting point on the boom closer to the lift arms for heavier loads. It doesn't lift as high but it does help put more weight on the front axle. keep on a tractoring and a cutting!!
Thanks, Paul!
New to your channel. I watched a few older videos on your LT10. Very impressed with your attention to detail. Great camera angles!! I also scrolled through the rest of your videos. Great variety!! I am interested in a Wood Mizer sawmill. I’ll be asking you a few questions! I SUBSCRIBED!! Chris in MN.
Good video! Tilley! Tilley!
Enjoyed the video. A man can do a lot with leverage from the other side of ramps you build.
I also have a LT-10 with 3 rails so I can cut 16' logs. That blade lever is a weak point. After 30 logs It broke the link. So after replacing the part, I gently press the blade engage lever on and off. Other then that I have milled several large logs into lumber. I am not sure why you have it up so high in the air.
Well done. Nice sawmill.
You can put two skids against your mill rails...wrap chain around the centerof log and pull it up with tractor from the opposite side.
Not a bad idea. Thanks!
It's called parbuckle, and I was amazed he didn't do that. SR
Sawyer Rob 👍
Sawyer Rob My granddaddy use to load big logs the same way with Mules. Many moons ago.
I was going to suggest the same thing, or even a Come Along anchored to a tree.
How bout a log deck? I made ramps and used my truck at first too pull the logs up on to the mill. I am on my 3rd winch from harbor freight beautiful wood in the end, big wood = a lot of work good luck on your winch project if I can help just ask I am more than glad to help you if I can I learned a few things making mine
Larry Downes 👍
Yep, that's exactly what I'm thinking of doing. Just like the system on yours and the ones Wood Mizer uses on the portable manual mills. Appreciate it, Larry. I might ask for some tips when the time comes, I really like your mill.
Love the chicken photo bomb! Nice job as always!
Thanks!
Boy, you have a tough audience, dude!
Invest in an old dually truck, 1 ton or heavier. put a lift boom on it. well worth the effort, and you`ll find use for it more than you think. nice video, nice job on the planks. those telling you about the board you "wasted" forgot about the two inch log taper. skin cuts usually don`t yield much leftover.
That's some good looking pine you've got there! I hate that you had to trim it down to get it on the mill but we all have to do it sometimes.
I hated it too, but the slabs turned out great! Thanks for watching.
@@falllineridge man, if I lived even an hour closer, I'd have come down with the 35.
What a sweet log :-)
Check the air pressure in your back tires.......they look low. Thanks for the vids!
Appreciate it and thanks for watching!
And some trac weight in the front tires.
That’s going to be a thick/heavy table. The wood is beautiful 😊
imm enjoying watching your videos good luck and take good care my friend....
You'd better copyright that Can't Cam!!! Great video! I had a tree service drop 30 loblolly pine logs that looked like this one, but with sap pouring out. Beautiful wood.
I have cut lobiolly pine that big and bigger sap no longer gives me a problem pine sol and water keeps my blades clean
@@jamesspears5127 I used Dawn dish soap in the blade cooling water, but still sap all over the bunks and non-moving parts from my gloves.
I'm going to try Pinesol in the water and in the machine cleanup. Thanks!
I would like to see the finished table top. Will you make beaches? You most likely have chairs or will you make them your self? Beautiful wood!!
Nice looking straight grain lumber
Just a couple of ideas to throw around. Just new to your channel but noticed that you don,t wear gloves when handling the timber, maybe a cheap pair would be better than nothing. Also, a piece of wood the width of the black stabilizer posts could be screwed to the side of the wooden rails which would keep you from having to get them from underneath the mill rails on the ground and off the the dirt. Finally, that ramp hopefully is not far away to help you put the logs on the mill easier. Not sure of your first name, but i really like your channel mate!!!! All the very best for your future milling endeavors and look forward to your videos.
Okay, now you have to have a Stealth Chicken Cameo in all future videos !
Agreed, but I still like the young pup a little better. :-)
Yes, I love your Stealth Chicken. I now want some clothing look alike.
try putting one end of the log on the mill , chain loosely so it can rotate with out binding , pick up other end and rotate it on to mill i have done this in the past , it will work in a pinch till you get more lifting capacity
Thanks for sharing.
I built a 3 point hitch forklift. If you have wet lines, you can use them along with the mast from an old forklift to raise, lower & tilt. Poor man's front end forked loader!
I remember sawing my first log. It felt dangerous. Of course it was on a home made mill and the log was a 24 inch ash that i had to roll up the ramps via can't hook. But i can see how milling soft wood on a woodmizer is dangerous for sure.
You should watch a couple of Matthew Cremona's videos. He uses a winch cable around his logs to pull them up onto his trailer and sometimes onto his mill when they are really big.
Awesome job my brother very nice wood to, I will see you later take care :)
Thanks!
Only found your site yesterday, great films................
... don’t know why I feel jealous of the yield from the log.... good looking slabs
That log was all the little tractor wanted, but you handled it like a pro. Nicely done!
it wasn't though, it was a sloppy lift, his boom is set wrong, it was how a hack hacks his way through some hack work... he managed to accomplish it against all odds doing it the worst way possible without hurting himself or breaking his equipment... that's not nicely done, that's a lucky sumbitch...
FRONT END LOADER WOULD BE THE CATS,, WITH TONGS YOU CAN TAKE IN & OUT WITH EASE.. ALOHA
Somewhere around 55 years old. :) The tree that is.
Dangerous log? I was expecting timber bound, or at least a yellow jacket nest. Lol!
You got a huge open area there. You should plant trees now for your retirement account. Expensive wood growing on your own property.
I have an Alaskan chainsaw mill attachment for my saw just for situations like yours. I can slab up the bigger logs and lift them onto my mill by cutting them down to a more manageable slab size for the tractor then mill them like normal. You spend a lot of time cutting with the chainsaw but save time on the mill and have considerably less length wastage.
Love those Ford 3000 tractors!