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topchippyles

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Everything posted by topchippyles

  1. See if i can find that for you now
  2. Basically the same thing just modified
  3. Yup many many times
  4. One of the best they did
  5. Never come across those timberry mills only on usa/canada sites so how did you get hold of one over here.
  6. Are you the other side of the water mr ed
  7. How much quicker do you find milling with the F2 say a 20" log than you would using the alsakan style ? 50%
  8. Or a tractor til 2023 or a bandsaw mill til 2025
  9. Are you calling me old then. YUP SUPPOSE I AM
  10. Cheap as chips to run is that.
  11. Both myself and roughy have used much wider bars on our existing setups.
  12. Old school measurements it is then 🤙
  13. If set up correctly the ES8 motor will easily handle a 36" bar or even a 50" with the extra power over the ES5. The ES5 is rated at 4.6 Kw and spec will run a 700mm bar, The ES8 is rated at 8 Kw and that is a monster sized motor and can easily handle bigger bars. The F2 is rated at 600mm wide logs but roughy goes much wider on his setup and easily done if you have the space to build a platform/loading bay. Most who use bandsaw mills really are limited on the board/slab width so have to revert to the chainsaw method on larger logs. Technical data Log diameter: Up to 60 cm, with the possibility of sawing even larger logs Log length: 3.8 m as standard, but the sawmill can be extended to any length Weight: 52 kg without saw unit Length: 4 m Width: 0.7 m Accessories: The sawmill can be extended when required. Motor options: The Stihl chainsaws MS391/ MS661 or Logosol's high-efficiency electric saws. Log moulder.
  14. Unlike most i have the ability to machine wide boards and a nice chunky thick slab looks the business
  15. Then 55mm as opposed to 50mm and only reason is a slab is a serious piece of wood and if kept as a slab (table top) most joiners work to a 2" 50mm finished size so the 5mm allows for machining. A 45mm slab looks thin believe it or not on a wide board
  16. Beat me to it but great minds think alike 🤙
  17. I mill most of mine at 110mm and reason for that is it dries with less twist and movement. Later it can always be milled down to 50mm X 2 slabs and most timber will be machined (planed) at some point and stock sizes tend to be 50/100/150/200 mm wide/thickness
  18. Fair point but you cannot price jobs thinking my saw is going to seize or van has a flat tyre scenario. If i price a stairs/cut roof ect and my planer packs up that has no baring on the customer. You maintain your equipment to prevent breakdowns but things go wrong yes. Each job is priced accordingly and what is quoted by one firm is never going to be the same quoted by another.
  19. So let me get this right if everything runs well with no mishaps £750 is doable. A breakdown or something goes wrong which is not the customers fault then is £1200-1500. Am i missing something here 🙄
  20. Early bird yet again mick
  21. First one stuart and what made you go for this setup with the ES8 electric saw ? Have you used the F2 mills before mate.
  22. Sounds like you go to work (nhs) for a rest day
  23. Here is another couple for your collection .
  24. Work 52 weeks a year do you (not) 52 weekends in a year plus holidays time off not working. 260 self employed working days
  25. Nice topic and up to now the usual ones who side track a thread have kept quite (No names) Just one thing going down the 7.5 ton route the wagons are cheap as chips but the weekly/6 weekly checks are a pain but above all i found the mot/plating side can get very costly and needs to be taken to a vosa mot approved garage.If you do decide to go down that route look for a good local place who can undertake any repairs required on short notice. Roll on roll off (hook loader) good trucks.

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