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Billhook

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Everything posted by Billhook

  1. I also meant to say that the six ton Matbro had a go at this log, me thinking that Ash would be easy for it. After several failed attempts, both with four wheel drive and then just using the teleram against the brakes I decided to charge it to create an initial shock to open the split. The only initial shock was when my nose came into contact with the windscreen after a very sudden stop and the log just sat there laughing! Just shows the power and traction of the D7, completely effortless.
  2. Just saw this which is more akin to a child's toy, if it was not so dangerous. I mean look at the speed it cuts that bit of timber at the end!
  3. Some people are really mad!
  4. Here at 3.50
  5. Lyre Bird Chainsaw imitation
  6. So I take on board all the comments here concerning firewood sales. The stupidity of using dry or wet firewood to dry other firewood, the fact that having dried your firewood by whatever means and then selling it to someone who leaves it in a heap where it regains all the moisture it has just lost. I suggest selling logs not as firewood but as a work of art. Chainsaw carvings perhaps with each log representing a politician, wooden, split down the middle both left and right, processed, then elevated to a great height before a sudden drop to the bottom, sometimes wet and a lot of times rotten, usually ending up in a log jam!
  7. The four quarters should now easily go through the Palax processor Three in the photo, I took one away to test
  8. Re-welded the horizontal knife with a pair of gussets. First day without rain since September 22rd so started up Daisy Etta to have a go at a two foot diameter Ash log several feel long. ”Too easy” said Daisy Etta “ I really need a bit of five foot diameter oak for a proper work out! Sorry about the first link glitch 4E36209F-752D-4C08-9327-37CE29CA13DE.MOV
  9. It’s that time of year again! After a relatively mild wet windy spell which has dragged on since September 23rd according to my diary, we have had a sudden series of clear night skies and white over ground frosts. And guess what, the Blackthorn has just come into flower!
  10. Sorry if this has been posted before
  11. And I say it was the snake! He was the root of all evil, now who made the snake? Oh, wait a minute....................
  12. Yes, just the same argument that it was manufacturer of the artificial fuel who is to blame for enabling the Panzers to be able to go to war
  13. “You could argue”.and you do! I will argue that if Dunlop had not invented the tyre and Henry Bessemer the steel making process and James Watt the steam engine and many other British inventions we would not have the capability of going to war in a mass destructive way. So it is all our fault!
  14. They have certainly got God in a big way and you need to be very careful with heathen British attitudes One thing that we have bigger than Americans is our gallon Having said all that I love them, and at a certain level of society they are not only very generous, but very capable and their can do attitude is not to be sneered at. They saved our bacon twice in the two World wars and have kept the peace in Europe.
  15. In case you become too excited you had better watch this "Dust" scifi film first!
  16. Oops indeed! The scary bit for me in the Good Morning interview was when at 3.27 Phillip suggests that there may be a sinister side to all this and she gives a little smirk. The guy with the mutton chops looks like your normal deranged scientist who has tunnel vision, very much like Frankenstein.
  17. I just take the first two or three inches off the top of a log in inch square lengths with the Lucas Mill
  18. Or the scene from the cult film Dark Star, where the captain is trying to reason with an intelligent bomb
  19. Put the photos on the Elm Flooring thread.  I am not sure what you wood turners are after.  Those burr like lumpy bits?

     

     

     

  20. So the first series of photos shows the old soldier in the middle of some parkland and it measures four feet in diameter at chest level There seems to be a lot of interesting lumps and bumps but Ian not sure what wood turners covet most Very sad to lose that tree The second two are of a two foot diameter hedgerow tree that is covered with ivy and is hard to make out The last photo is of a large limb Both trees were in full leaf in 2018 and died suddenly and completely in 2019 The ground is so wet that we have not been able to take any machinery to them All the elms that have died previously due to DED took several years to die, starting with a few patches of pale leaves in the crown and steadily becoming worse over time. I really thought that these two were immune and going to survive

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