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wills-mill

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About wills-mill

  • Birthday 17/02/1977

Personal Information

  • Location:
    Stuck in the Wealden Clay, Surrey/ Sussex
  • Occupation
    Mobile Sawyer, lapsed climber and woodlander
  • City
    Horsham

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  1. I'd always lean towards always air drying beforehand, I think. Oak just behaves like such a knob if rushed through the drying process. One other major factor to watch is the quantities of tannin and goo that get dragged out of Green Oak by a kiln will do absolutely horrendous things to standard dehumidifier or heat coils, and any other metal fittings. It's certainly mentioned in the textbooks, and I have been told of one *very* expensive incident locally (back in the good old days) when somebody thought it was a wizzo idea to run a load of Green Oak through a brand new kiln.
  2. Thanks dude. We do bigger trade orders, and have just started monthly open days at the workshop for dry timber and hobby boards. Next one is Friday and Saturday 24th and 25th Feb.
  3. Ouch! £1.40 per m is pretty spicy. The last lot we sold out to others worked out at 65p each for 4ft long 1 x 0.75in. I suppose that was fresh sawn, mind. But they don't take long to dry off. I quite like doing them, which I know goes against the grain for most people Happy to bang them on a pallet if anyone needs them who isn't in the South East.
  4. Thanks Peds, we've been milling connie mix as stock chunky boarding and (pre-Covid) it was very popular with wedding caterers and pubs/restaurants for tables and all sorts of interior fit-out work. The poor buggers in hospitality have other things on their minds at the moment, but hopefully there'll be more confidence in Spring 2023.
  5. That whole family/group of aromatic Cypress type connies are just fantastic. Quite happy to buy it in at proper softwood sawlog prices, it really comes up nicely.
  6. I'm always intrigued that the UK restrictions on sheep just happened to be in the areas adjoining the UK's own nuclear fuel processing facilities and the big manky power station that had various catastrophes over the preceding decades. Very handy.
  7. We've been doing a fair bit of diseased Ash and it's pretty decent. You'll soon notice any really punky or soft areas, and the outside of the log will tell you if the middle is going to be horrendous. I wouldn't trust the boards so much in traditional jobs where the springiness of Ash was required, but for basic slab type material it's been totally fine.
  8. We're happy to take arbchip and tipper loads of mixed cord and rings, but ideally looking for ££ sawlog sized conifer and happy to pay commercial sawlog money ££ for good material that is delivered by prior discussion: - Thuja, Leylandii, Macrocarpa, Lawsons, Redwood. - Lengths: 2.1m, 2.8m, 3.8m - Diameter: 250mm small end and upwards - Reasonably straight - Knotty logs no prob, but not looking for multi stemmed spraggly monsters. - Minimal muck, metal, digger damage. Please get in touch beforehand, we have a diary to arrange just like everyone else 🙂
  9. The T35 and several others of its era don't have shear pins. You'll see in the manual that the handle is called a safety device, that's because it has a weak ring milled around it, so the handle bends over if you go at things like a gorilla. With a shear pin machine you can go wild with long scaffold poles if you fancy, but on the T35 it's not a terribly bright idea if you're keen to dreadfully punish some poor innocent roots
  10. Yeah, it's certainly a scary financial jump for grey boxes of mystery. I dipped in and out for years at different variations for attempting to run a Stenner 36 resaw (15hp 11kw) from the workshop supply, but it was so tight and I never was confident enough in it working to start spending. Mizers aren't a dreadful start up load, but they are a significant enough start up load!
  11. I'm out of my depth on the two phase/split phase farm malarkey, but I'm fairly certain that rotary convertors do create true 3 phase, while the static convertors do not. I'm running a pretty ancient 15hp rotary for the workshop and it's a fabulous thing that makes magic from a very marginal 50A 240v supply. It's so much nicer than pratting about with starting gennies and pouring diesel up your arm occasionally in my book. Whether you can apply a soft start module or 3 phase to 3 phase inverter drive to the extent that you're massively lessening the start up loads on the convertor is something for the commercial gurus to work out. It's one of those things where you want one single firm supplying both the convertor and the start device- if you get the components separately and it gives any grief, then both suppliers will just blame the other for your woes.... Keep us informed
  12. It could well be that your 6 month old log simply has nice summery sugars in the sapwood. I really noticed it on a softwood for the first time this year with a young-ish set of lengths from a Cedar of Lebanon that was felled in the middle of some absolutely baking August weather. The whole of the sapwood has gone very black, and I'm guessing it's the influence of all the sugars and starches being readily available for mouldy little blighters. I've avoided any summer felled polite/white hardwoods for quite a few years for this reason, but it is unusual to notice on a softwood. I'll try and grab a photo of the Cedar later. W
  13. This one? it looks decent enough, the saw guides are a bit Axminster, but for pottering about I'm sure it's a useful little lump. 2.2kw or 3hp motor isn't going to set the world on fire either, but probably balances up with the rest of it. HOLZMANN Blochbandsäge Bbs 350 WWW.EBAY.CO.UK Holzmann log band saw BBS350 Engine data Motor power S1 in W 2.2 Voltage 400 V / 3/50 Hz General dimensions Band... head band saw / BBS350 400V / head band saw - HOLZMANN Maschinen GmbH WWW.HOLZMANN-MASCHINEN.AT The BBS350 is designed exclusively for cutting soft, hard, dry, raw or frozen timber or wooden prisms. ✓ all types of timber...
  14. Sorry Mr Hook. 30 seconds in and the voice is grating. I'm out.
  15. I'd love to sell Elm and Oak slabs at £96 per cubic ft too There's been a surprising amount of big Walnuts hitting the floor this year and being milled. I've seen some stunning photos recently from Patrick Turk at Forest2Furniture and from Richie McBride at Holly Cottage Tree Services.

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