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Frank
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I hear what your saying. I think I’d be knackered if I had to use steels all the time. They do come in handy for learners though. They seem to draw into the cut better than plastics or hi- lifts.

Learners or leaners ? Would defo learn you that saw chain and steel dont mix.

 

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3 hours ago, jones said:

I still use metal wedges although they are mushroomed quite badly and need replaced.  They can be picked up at ironmongers/tool shops.  Can't remember the last time I saw one in an arb shop though.  Steel all the way.  Only plastic wedge I own is on my harness for big removals

Grind off the mushrooms or use a gas axe to do it

 

When I started work it was with a couple of 65 year old veterans who worked together during the war, when felling was a reserved occupation. Fred was the feller and Ted the assistant, Ted only had one eye as a bit had come off a felling wedge and hit the other one.

 

Similarly my late mate on the same firm lost the use of his eye from a wedge splinter within the last 10 years

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48 minutes ago, openspaceman said:

Grind off the mushrooms or use a gas axe to do it

 

When I started work it was with a couple of 65 year old veterans who worked together during the war, when felling was a reserved occupation. Fred was the feller and Ted the assistant, Ted only had one eye as a bit had come off a felling wedge and hit the other one.

 

Similarly my late mate on the same firm lost the use of his eye from a wedge splinter within the last 10 years

Quite a common injury.  I had a few lumps come off and embed themselves in flesh.  The old fallers warned us though :-)

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Years ago when I started my firewood business in France, I used a large axe in my left hand and a sledge hammer in my right to split logs. After a year or so the axe and hammer were badly mushroomed but the sledgehammer had started to break and split as well.
Firing tiny bits of shrapnel randomly.
That's when I learned to make BIG mallets.
Metal on metal not good.
[emoji106]

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1 hour ago, Rough Hewn said:

Years ago when I started my firewood business in France, I used a large axe in my left hand and a sledge hammer in my right to split logs. After a year or so the axe and hammer were badly mushroomed but the sledgehammer had started to break and split as well.
Firing tiny bits of shrapnel randomly.
That's when I learned to make BIG mallets.
Metal on metal not good.
emoji106.png

Most of all never hit an axe with a hammer, it can cause the eye to split out but grind mushroomed bits off before they fly off.

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