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skc101fc

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Everything posted by skc101fc

  1. I crouch down over the saw engine between the knees , same as joe Newton, with cup of stewing tea close by ready to drink when finished. Also and most importantly, taught myself to be both left and right handed for filing the cutters. Takes a loy of practice to get the pressure the same for each side but well worth while. I actually prefer to grip with knees than use one of the knock in clamps, it seems to put the line of sight better for keeping angle and cutter length correct. Shaun
  2. Shaun conroy 101 forward control land rover . There ya go , I'm outed
  3. Yeah sorry , got a bit carried away there .What I'm trying to say is if there are trolls and other monsters out there having a chip in as and when they wish it makes it much easier to feed em through the chipper if ya can find em .
  4. That's fine by me , I'm all for people not hiding behind a name when the **** is flying. Don't say online what you wouldn't dare to say face to face, and all that....
  5. The reason I ask is out here our broadband is massively sporadic and unreliable, so im never sure that a message has been sent. If the message is replied to I see it as a thread, it's just the initial outgoing pm that I can't see. Unless I'm looking in the wrong place, which is often the case !!
  6. Is there also a sent box as well as inbox for pm's. Never found one yet?
  7. James Not wanting to take this off topic I've sent a pm Shaun
  8. Yes I got the bevel cutter and have never really got on with it. That said, I've only used it twice. One dimension is obviously locked in place by the sliding scale. The second measure - the thin edge is achieved by travelling the required thickness and measuring manually on the scale plus making an allowance for kerf. Straightforward enough, but to do at speed to be productive isn't great, and I wouldn't dare to do it for a paying customer until I'm much more proficient. Wastage is very high per board produced due to the kerf width being almost the same as the narrow edge, and the damage to the next layer below when the inclined blade cuts in 1/4 -1/2 inch . All in all its not my favourite component. Perhaps with more use I'd get to appreciate it
  9. Ooooohh lovely. get the feeling this threads losing control. - funny how that happens
  10. No I don't quarter saw. If the customer asked for it I would but I would also have to learn fast! Nearly all of my work is producing construction type timber for farm sheds or fencing. Some of my arty clients have had me slab their logs but invariably don't know what they're going to do with it apart from storing the slabs indefinitely !! Seems a shame to use the lucas just to produce firewood. I cut short oak as 8 x 8 gateposts at 7 or 8 foot long. Lighter and shorter lengths still make strainers. The unusable knot ends would go for firewood. Farmers don't tend to care where the pith lies or that there's knots in the timber as long as the posts last forever or longer. Shaun
  11. I wish all my work was major size logs, a great feeling of maximum output. Unfortunately most of the time its 18 - 30 inch stuff, heavily tapered, bowed and horrendously knotted. Loads of wastage and a second rate product. Its the client's timber though ,I can only advise and then take the money. Yes the mill is relatively new, 16 months old and 220 hours on the clock. Love it but hate the slabber !! S
  12. And thanks for the pleasure I've had over the years reading the most wide ranging of subjects. What a service. . Shaun
  13. Hi Steve. One issue for me is logging in whilst going through the timeline. If I see a post I want to add to I come back out to go to the main menu, log in and then can't remember where the post was so have to scroll through them all again. As I don't look every frequently enough this can at times be a hell of a long way through the listing. What I would like to see is a login access from any point at all ,if that's possible? Otherwise Arbtalk works great for me. Thanks Shaun
  14. This was a pure gem of a macrocarpa . 18 feet long ( this piece, there was another 18 &12 foot section but obviously reducing diameters. ).The chainsaw is a 36 inch 066. Had to keep taking of the blade flip lever to pass under the the cross rails until it was worked down enough, producing 9×3 rails. It was a hard slog getting the lucas unit up that high and working almost under the blade!
  15. Good use of the ballast dog there for quite a weighty load. I like the look of the low sides for loading over in comparison to most other very similar designed trailers. Good to see in use. Shaun
  16. My handwriting is normally appallingly scruffy, if I have birthday, Christmas cards or a letter to write I'll always go for the fountain with ink from the bottle. -its a sort of ritual thing that slows me down and makes me think a bit more. Shaun
  17. Just in the middle of watching tattoo fixers, had a few ciders as well , when the ads came on and suddenly noticed the similarity between the muller rice bear with a coiffured carpet on his head, and Donald Trump with the same item on his. Is it just my mind, the cizzer or the truth?
  18. Good to hear your progress. The losing traction issue, was that due to overloading or balance of load on trailer. I've got the yam 450 kodiak with independent rear suspension, this I know often doesn't put trailer weight on the rear axle in the same way a solid rear axle does, giving some damn unpredictable handling characteristics. I keep looking at the trailer design and wondering if I can also mount a round bale carrier on it ,but the length of drawbar looks like it would be a real cow to manoeuvre. -trying to make one chassis do every job.
  19. I also use a lucas as contract milling service. Too right - loads of sawdust especially when doing small dimension work. BUT the sawdust is, like the timber and offcuts, my clients property, its his or her issue to move it anywhere. But before I pack down the mill I blow out the airways ,frame nooks and crannies, and also the air filter . - thats the clients sawdust too! Oh and yes I use the aforementioned ryobi - at least it don't blow the guts out of my air filter!!! Shaun
  20. Mill in situ?
  21. Thanks for the warning. For some reason I didn't. Normally I'm too curious and click before I've thought. - is it a baddy? Shaun
  22. That's a really good answer, but probably not to this post. A nice insight into commercial techniques bog all to do with stihls quality.!

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