https://www.google.com/search?client...ller+standards
lots of good clear concise info in these vids
https://www.google.com/search?client...ller+standards
lots of good clear concise info in these vids
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
the technique I was thinking of was basically this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dBULPgWfUc
Although I was taught to take the bind first - then do the undercut in a way that will allow the tree to come down in a controlled manner
Ok so I see where the " fence posts " are being created in that vid
Thats ^^ what I do when my trees get hung up
Anyone whom is not sure wtf they are doing there is a whole lot of vids online about falling trees
Last edited by XXX-er; 07-03-2019 at 09:16 AM.
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
in my brief experience, i find a lot more tension / compression (high energy) in blowdown than trees that get hung-up. I slowly work to ease the tension/compression. I'm getting better at not pinching my bar. I get tricked about where the compression is on occasion.
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I just learned what barberchair is...
https://youtu.be/EKzvkRnCF58
Oh shit
I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.
Alder and maple you gotta watch your ass. Honestly, I would leave both to a pro. You need long bars (get as far away from the tree as possible), big and fast saws, and a fucking sharp full skip chain for equipment, and a whole lot of skill with a bit of a willingness to die.
Cut a bunch of blowdowns today. This thread has really elevated my still very low skillset.
This one is fucked. I just hope it falls...and not on anyone. Right next to a trail.![]()
That last picture: hard to tell from the photo, but I’d consider getting a rope around it and pulling down, perhaps with a simple rope come-along pulley system that’d allow the puller(s) some leverage and the ability to be out of harms way.
Yeah, it's a tough one. I thought about what you mentioned and it could probably be done, but I would want help with that. Was hard to get a pic with any sense of scale. To the right there is two main branches compressed up against another tree. I think ideally is climb the thing and cut from up top. Not something I can do though.
Understood. Hard to tell from a single photo. It looks like a pretty big limb.
Anyone use their chainsaw to cut rough timber to use on mountain bike features? What do you use for a mill jig? I’m not looking to rip anything big.
Something like this? https://m.northerntool.com/shop/tool...xoCCu4QAvD_BwE
You should get the SCA trail work book.
I didn't believe in reincarnation when I was your age either.
hmmmm, I don't see any mtn bikers doing that ^^ instead they buy wood and figure out how to get it out to where its needed, the local mtn bike association in some cases uses treated beams like for under a bridge which makes sense looking at it from the very long view instead of replacing an entire bridge 10-20 yars down the road ?
My understanding is you need a pretty good pro quality saw the bigger the better, which is then heavier/ more expensive/ burns more fuel and then you got the jig which all presents more logistics problems if what you are doing is trying to mill the wood on site ?
also every cut uses 1/4 " of your wood one of the reasons why bandsaw mills are better, I know people who have bought a bandsaw mill did the wood to build their houses and sell the mill to the next guy
Last edited by XXX-er; 08-03-2019 at 02:28 PM.
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
A friend uses an AK mill on his little ranch with an ms390. Pretty sure he only uses it on softwoods.
This might be the place to ask, given the recent discussion. I have a large yellow birch hung up on a maple. The birch is badly rotten for 10 feet or more, but still attached to the stump. Too dangerous to cut the birch or the maple. I have been waiting 3 years for the wind to take it down, but has not happened yet. Thinking about blasting it with some black powder on a rainy day with friends on hand. Never done something like that. Any thoughts?
Tannerite is what you seek.
Up in the woods on a ski glade. Couple guys I cut with are a lot better than me with a saw and won’t touch it. Have thought about try to get off with come along but lot of weight. It’s a big tree. If we break it free from the stump and still hung up should be able take down in pieces. Appreciate thoughts
Last edited by cat in january; 08-04-2019 at 05:44 PM.
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