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Dan Maynard

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Everything posted by Dan Maynard

  1. I love the "Dried by the power of the wind and sun". It's great marketing - softwood page doesn't mention the dirty word conifer either.
  2. Synthplus is same price as Oregon at FrJones -£60 for 20l Stihl vs £75 for 25l Oregon. Hadn't thought about it compared to fuel, per litre it's more but saw uses two or three times as much petrol as oil so per day I'd reckon is less. Bit like the 2 stroke oil debate, I don't have any problems with bar or chain wear so stick with what I know.
  3. If it's for conservation they may not want the plastic bits left over. Tip the granules out of an eco plug and seal over with beeswax.
  4. I do this too, it was really good for me when I first got tickets to get experience, and also make more local contacts. Met lots of interesting people, could get lots of free/cheap wood that way. If you've time on your hands then get the basic chainsaw ticket and go conservation volunteering, certainly round here there's a shortage of people with tickets.
  5. Yes, it is sufficient to dig out the main stump. I doubt you'll find all that much below 20cm, and it won't regrow from the roots down there anyway.
  6. Yeah if you're being serious I think you are right. It gets even worse if you rent whilst waiting, there's another ten grand gone that you could have put toward the house.
  7. Wait for house prices to crash and you can buy it then.
  8. I think he was comparing Oregon to cheap stuff though? I've no complaints with synthplus.
  9. Painful as it is I'd rather drive a tracked grinder 1km down a footpath than dig out 2 big stumps.
  10. People rush out to buy chainsaws to cut next year's wood? Or cut up pallets and sheds? Or burn any old rubbish that's still damp. Woodsure ready to burn approach is working well here too I see.
  11. I would guess olives or vines probably for a very long time...
  12. You could have a look for local tip sites and try messaging a few of the people, some might have means to collect if you're local. If they are good logs you ought to be able to sell them on FB though.
  13. I would say, once you grind it into little pieces and mix with soil the fungus may carry on but conditions have completely changed and they will decay a lot faster. Unlikely to get big brackets like that after, but you might get lines following the major roots.
  14. That turns to mist around you as you cut, I'd find breathing some of that in a bit worrying.
  15. You'd better give the Arb Association a bell too, Mark and let them know.
  16. If you measure the wire with verniers and overall length you can buy springs here https://www.assocspring.co.uk/looped-ends.html
  17. My dad repaired the cracked crankcase on his Dolmar 112 with fibreglass in about 1989 and the repair is still good. Dropped it out of a tree, one of the few times I can remember hearing him swear out loud.
  18. If you are determined to buy a bar, I wouldn't go .050 on the battery saw, bigger cut must mean less battery life. The mains one will surely have the power to run .050 though, why not just stick it on and run that? No point throwing away a perfectly good bar. Change next time.
  19. I have never heard of people using these devices for tree work, seems a bit of a funny kit to be honest.
  20. Do you not do pre-delivery check then? Each saw I've bought from a dealer has had the bar and chain fitted at the time.
  21. I also find less leaking if you fill up after use before putting away, you let the pressure out of the tank and add cold (thicker) oil.
  22. I've got a steel Honda that's over 20 years old. Plated over the corrosion about 5 years ago, can keep going like this for ages - advantage of steel I guess.
  23. Just needs to squeeze down the door seal enough, if it's made of steel would have thought it would be fine as the door never gets that hot. Have a go, if it doesn't work stop putting logs on and try something else when it's cooled down.
  24. I'd probably keep the LPG and supplement if you can, there will be times like when you get back from holiday or if you're ill that you just want to press a button and have heat.
  25. Search threads, whether poplar is worth milling is a regular question and it does have uses.

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