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Forest2Furniture

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Everything posted by Forest2Furniture

  1. Stood at the Major Oak Woodland Festival, Sherwood Forest at the weekend. Unusually high number of idiots in the visitors this year but as I was behind a fence well away from them if they looked to be about to ask something stupid I'd start the mill, hence was able to do a fair bit of milling Sycamore, Sweet Chestnut and some of the Sweet Chestnut burr I harvested earlier in the year.
  2. It'll smart a bit if the chains catches it!
  3. more like 120cm girth. I can see this being the oak tree equivalent of "I have a very valuable walnut tree" scenario
  4. One third down 2 to go! After youngest stepson offered to give me hand, we made a start tidying up the wood barn this weekend ready for new stock arriving. Clearly I didn't break him as he offered to come over next weekend too, he's starting to refer to it as his green-gym workout!
  5. I used to use electric when loading the mill but now I use a hand winch, I find I've got better control and as the logs are being rolled on not pulled there's very little effort needed.
  6. I wouldn't, as it's a directory I'm not really sure that's a necessary feature
  7. Electric is fine if you've got somewhere secure to keep the trailer otherwise it'll get liberated or it's a case of removing each night.
  8. I used my 660 with a 36" bar for years for milling until I could afford an 880, only problem I had was with the sissy pin snapping but once I took that out and put a blanking plug in no problems.
  9. You're better off loading from the side, pulling the log up from the back will put a lot of strain on the winch
  10. My next door neighbour is a reserve fireman, the day after they switched the cameras on he was doing a blue light run down the M1 and said he set off every camera at 80mph. So yes, the cameras are live
  11. Oh yeah, forgot to say done & done
  12. Perseverance is what you need and a glass of wine, if at first you don't succeed try again, it does work
  13. Even if you used an undermounted sink you'll have problems around the taps and the drip bead. Wooden work surface are great but no good near water, I suggest you use granite for that bit.
  14. It doesn't matter which wood you use none of them will fair well around a sink. I've used Ash in the past for work surfaces and finished with danish oil.
  15. Originally trees were quarter sawn for stability of boards, so that the growth rings were at 90 degrees or as near as possible to the plane, this cuts down on the board trying to straighten itself. However, they discovered that when oak was quarter sawn it also produced highly figured grain. If you look a the the image se7enthdevil posted that is the true way to quarter sawn but as already has been pointed out it is extremely wasteful way to mill which is why this method is very rarely used in commercial mills, that and it's nigh on impossible to cut other then by hand, they would have been cleaved from the log with a frow.
  16. Is that for hard or softwood? Works out at roughly 28kg per cu/ft. If hoppus foot is the measurement of what a log is expected to produce taking into account 25% wastage, to work out the weight you'd have to add the 25% back on to get a more accurate figure, Yes!
  17. That should read 'not convinced'
  18. Does anyone know of a way of working out the weight of trees, I found one on the web but convinced it's accurate. Thanks in advance
  19. Well, I've looked at them and can confirm they are differently big. Not totally sure what I'd do with them but I'm working on it. The one that died in the last year is about 6' DBH
  20. Image sent
  21. Yeah, no problem. Would you prefer it without the watermark.
  22. I've just been going through some old photos and found these 2 from a few years ago in the days when I was still chainsaw milling and could stack the boards in the order they came off. First one is of a tree I did for a customer second is of Oak stacked at my place 5yrs ago, I unstacked them a couple of months ago, the wide 1" boards at the bottom are lovely and flat.
  23. I think you must mean £130 cubic foot and that's a bit steep but if you can get it, well done you. If they were longer boards you my be in with a chance of getting that price but 6' is a short board in furniture terms.
  24. Static would suggest its a saw mill as in commercial premises where you take the trees to them rather then mobile where they come to you. I would stay with two categories; mobile and static Chainsaw mills are mobile so wouldn't need its own category and again we're talking general public who won't necessarily understand what a chainsaw mill is but will be able to distinguish between Mobile mill and Static mill, and if they can't then we don't really need that sort of customer!
  25. If this directory is for general public to use too you don't want to confuse them, in general Joe Public isn't known for their intelligence!

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