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Dan Curtis

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Everything posted by Dan Curtis

  1. Close on 100K brand new I think, but they use it everyday for everything
  2. If anyone wants a lift let me know, be headed down the a11:)
  3. It'll be air dried. Then some will be a benchy/table affair, some will be cladding, one piece is going to be squared with the alaskan into a bench with a feature, one that I did another thread on will become a castle for my nephews, and the rest I havent yet decided. Possibly try some shingles out of the offcuts, just as a tester
  4. Lovely job mate, the chassis looks in similar condition to my series 3, as seen earlier in the thread. One day I'll win the lottery and get it back on the road
  5. I know some guys who have a 27m Ruthmann on a cabstar. It's an awesome piece of kit, and even does 15m horizontal at ground level. It also self levels and can jack in various different ways, meaning you can still get up in a space not much wider than the truck itself, or have all four jacks out wide for good stability. The setup on it has to be the best I've seen, you literally get in the basket, push a button, it drops its legs and levels, you're off the ground. Takes approx 30 seconds from getting out the cab to being in the air:001_cool:
  6. Cheers mate, that's the bar clamp for Ian's logosol. It runs on the black rail in the first pic, then has a depth setter and edge guide similar to an alaskan mini mill. Quite a piece of kit!
  7. Ok then, can you guess what it is? Pulley, shackle, eye bolt. All inside 4" of wood, at approx 30ft above the ground. The eye bolt undid and amazingly the shackle still works. Didn't really notice cutting the ally of the sheave, other than the saw got a bit jumpy, not the usual iron nail feeling/noise though. It did surprisingly little damage to the chain. Sadly the stone I found today wasn't the same, but that's another story. Last pic, return of the trolley! I even discovered yesterday, it's possible to unload with pallet tines:thumbup1: Burrell, anytime, just drop me a pm. I wont be getting the majority milled until April/May time I shouldn't think.
  8. I'll get a picture up in a second. Got a few bits if you fancy a trip up here? Mr Humphries, the mycelial felts go up to at least 30ft, possibly more, I'll have a look at the higher timber when I get to it. Also, on the main log I posted pictures of earlier in the thread, there was not only the white, active felts, but also some greyed, powdery felt, as though it was the inactive, decaying remains of armillaria. If thats possible?!
  9. <p>Had a thought about the bad boards. The angle we were following wasnt a right angle, twas' obtuse so obviously we were going to end up with mis shapen planks. Doh!</p>

  10. Doesn't like mine:thumbdown:
  11. No, just the Granberg. I've never known it with any other saw/bar/chain, just this combination of sugi/Granberg. I'll try to get a vid tomorrow if I get the chance. Cheers rob
  12. Not when cutting, just when warming up, running the chain. But yes it's from the back of the bar. Maybe the bar is tapered a little too small before it hits the sprocket? Just thinking out loud...
  13. Do you know the beech at Canwick, one hell of a tree, both in girth and height. It's on private land but you can see it from the road. Climbed it a few times, and could probably get permission to go again
  14. David, with regards to the girth measurements, are they all done on circumference or diameter? Looked at the Preston twins, touted as the largest elms in Europe, though in the table there are two others, getting on for twice the size?
  15. Yeah, I find if you wait until whatever you have in is loose and will turn easily, you should get a bigger one in. That said, don't go mad and rush it, blowouts are rank!
  16. Haha, that's what I said! Then just carried on up to 20:D five weeks is a long time, probably took me that to get from fresh pierced up to 16mm Reckon my hours are about 22 ish on tats
  17. Thinking about it, it's usually when horizontal and in the mill so maybe caused by flex in the bar?
  18. Got a 36 for my 395. I usually use it just for milling but have a semi chisel chain for it too. Milling wise I don't have much to compare it to. Had it on for crosscutting bigger than bar length ash the other day. It has a lot of rigidity, making for smoother horizontal cut placement, and a nice weight to it. The only thing I find (that might just be me) is that when combined with Granberg ripping chain, no matter what tension it's at, the chain seems a bit free of the rails, even if tensioned way beyond where it should be
  19. peckerwoo? Don't know why though!
  20. I did ponder that one!
  21. That's a swift!
  22. Gnome
  23. Let's do it could do some measuring while we're there. Still got your lj, I'll try to drop in Friday night if I get the chance
  24. Don't know the lime but I have been past the one at Kirton. Can't really remember it but know it's a good one. The "reduction" was phase one of a retrenchment plan, I hit it as hard as I dared, though I'm not sure it was as much as I was meant to. Haven't seen it for a few months but last time I saw it it was flushing a new top, seemingly with most of the growth being nodal. There is a metal strap round the bottom church side limb if you get that close, nearly entirely occluded.
  25. Ok, so not a record breaker but one I visit regularly. Measured the stem at 52"dbh. Beautiful old pollard, completely hollow yet intact stem. It's a pain to get a good photo as it's surrounded on three sides by other trees. Incidentally, it's the same tree that Ian Flatters and I filmed our rw video in the snow last year

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