#545
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- čas přidán 1. 09. 2019
- Today Melissa and I saw a nice red oak log on the Woodmizer LX 150 and talk about what I've learned so far since Iv'e only been sawing about a month.
Our Address: Mike Morgan
P.O. Box 2140
Cranberry Twp. Pa. 16066
CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE! www.outdoorswiththemorgans.com
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Please Like Our FaceBook Page @outdoorswiththemorgans and follow on Instagram
email is outdoorswiththemorgans@gmail.com
Equipment that we use on the Property:
RK 24 Subcompact Tractor Loader, Backhoe & 54" Granite Grapple
RK 37 Compact Tractor With Loader and 72" Granite Grapple
RK 55 Compact Tractor With Loader
Polaris 900 Crew Side x Side
Wolfe Ridge Compact Commercial Log Splitter
Black Diamond 22 ton Log Splitter
RK by King Kutter 1.5 Ton Dump Trailer
Attachments:
Brush Hogs
Tiller
Box Blade
Land Plane
Disc
Post Hole Digger - Jak na to + styl
Has the wife do all the heavy lifting love this guy a true american hero thumbs ☝ 🇺🇸 great mill!
Melissa, on the job again, love this lady. 🇱🇷👍
Thanks Melissa for asking the question that I've had from day one about Wood-Mizer debarker, just too afraid to ask, thinking it's been answered already.
Love the videos, look forward to them.
Melissa, when you're pulling the boards off the top, one trick is to pivot the board from the end of the board and then "SLIDE" the board off to the pile so you don't have to pick it up every time. Bring the loader closer to the mill about 3 feet should work so you can walk between the pile and the mill for straightening. Another handy tool is a metal rod with a hook on the end, like a firewood poker. It can catch the edge of the board and pull it towards or push it away without messing your fingers up. Also, as someone else suggested. Raise the mill about 2 feet. with some of your 'fire wood" logs, make some CANTS, essentially, junk wood cut into 8x8 etc... you could do 12 by 12 and stack them.. make them about 36" long and attach the mill to them to keep from shifting. White oak or Poplar would be best but use what works. The saw dust is good to mix with compost or use as a mulch around trees, fence posts, mailbox etc. Also, Melissa, as far as the splinter goes, there would be a line of men willing to assist you in pulling it out.... Just saying. Keep up the excellent videos you two.
FYI, I used to stack lumber for my cousins' saw mill at Southern Indiana Hardwoods It was a summer job 25 years ago. I am now allergic to fresh cut Poplar, but still enjoy the smells of the fresh cut wood, cherry, sassafras, pretty much all of them! I have also worked for RK at store number 10 before RK put their name on the tractors and equipment.
Love your videos. Keep going and having fun. I like that you have your family involved..
I love your guys banter at the end. Great video
That sawdust makes some awesome compost for your garden. Love that saw mill.Keep up the good work.
I see the weight training has come full circle.... Great job handling those Oak boards... Team work is the key.. Hats off to both of you... Great show..
Hi guys and Mr Hunter you guys round out your lives very well. Love all your video,s keep up the great life style peace to all.
hehehehe Mike you gave me a good laugh when you said the younger people wont remember Taxi,.... To me your the younger ones. I really enjoy your video's and the quality of work you do.
A great video to wake up too on a day off. Enjoyed it while drinking my morning coffee(s)!!!
Mike, thanks for answering my question about the de-barker. Now I know what it is and it makes perfect sense. Another fun video.
Thanks for the video Mike and Melissa. That's some great looking red oak. Taxi was funny show that's in my time.
Thanks for the question on the debark-er, now I know its purpose!!
Many hands make light work. I have found it more enjoyable when family helps out. Great video as usual.
M&M , you have a wonderful hard working family with true american values, love your videos. Bless you. You bring back my past. " Jim" from Wyoming
Well I was on my way out to work on a couple of pastures and I get notice you posted a video. Now I'm 21 minutes behind schedule. Love it. Hope to meet you in Union.
Loved your video,,,,,,,,,especially the humor
Thanks
👌😂
I'm looking at this video about two (2) years after it was filmed and really enjoyed it !! Keep up the GREAT presentation and topic. Thanks for sharing, Mike and Melissa !!
Thank you John! Glad you enjoyed!
My Grandfather and Uncle were Sawyers in NC before I was born, I’m 68 now. The two truths I remember them saying, “You can’t saw anything bigger than the small end of a log “ and “Don’t saw your dogs”.
Enjoy your channel very much. Keep up the good work. God bless.
Good job guys!
Love your videos!! I am hoping someday to be able to do the things you and your family depict in your videos!! Thank you for sharing!!
Thanks for the happiness
Mike and Melissa 👍 thanks for another good video. Big HIGH to Hunter from the old teacher in central WI👋
Handling wood is good exercise. Nice video quality,info. Thanks
My dad had a wood heel factory in Miami. We had so much saw dust that we made a deal with some local butchers. We would supply them with saw dust for their freezers,they would in turn give us free meat and cold cuts. The larger wood chips from the drill presses went to horse farms in the area. They need wood chips and some times saw dust for the horse stalls, give them a good deal and they will buy from you.
You 2 make a great team...Another great video
Nice work with the saw mill !!👍👊
Melissa 'flossin' on the job...lol... So glad Mel that you had Mike explain that debarker! I was thinking it was suppose to De-bark the whole side of the board and couldn't figure out why there wasn't one on the other side... Now explained, from 6:50-6:58 you can actually see that little groove made for the blade Mike's talking about!☺
Love the sawmill video's!
I am so glad to see the new tape measure!!! That old rusty thing was driving me crazy'
Nice teamwork Morgans. Taxi was a great show. Lotka was hilarious
Another great video. Hi Hunter and greetings from North Wales 👍🏴
Saw that cute little dance. Nice , just not long enough. Some suggested leiderhosen for working around the mill. I concur. Leather shorts and construction boots. Can get a pair for Mike to wear for when you two switch jobs and you are running the mill and Mike is off-loading. HaHaHa . Good job. Now waiting for the next one. Hi Hunter, Eva, and Hannah.
Good video and great job milling that red oak. Melissa sure has a nice landing gear.
More sawdust from that sawdust making machine, love it.
I have learned that a log turner would be handy. Think about that when you build a building Mike, some sort of overhead hoist to flip those cants.
Living the dream!
hi there i have a circular mill witch generates a lot more and the the dust is a little corse , so what i do may not work for you . i put most of mine in the muddy spots on my trails . i keep some dried in dog food bags for oil dry in the shop , also on icey spots in the winter ,i like it better than salt . from time to time bedding but no cherry or walnut . i use it in a mulch mix i make . 1 part grass 1 part sawdust 2 parts old leafs let sit for 2 years( i have a vac for the grass and leafs) . marking spots or lines like lime . saw dust instead of a sand box . have a day john
i dont know anything about milling but it looks like something that i would enjoy doing. i dropped and cut up 4 big ash trees this morning. now i need a wolf ridge splitter hahaha. anyway, say hey to hunter and yall HAVE A DAY👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Matthew, I'd like to have a mill also, but I would have to have to cut more property , level the ground, build another building, and be 20 years younger! Lol
Hey Mike and Melissa, great video this morning. You’re doing good with the Wood Mizer , turning out some great looking lumber. You are also doing good with your tractors handling the loading and turning of the logs, but if you didn’t have those pieces of equipment 🤔. It is great that both of you are on board with what all you are doing around there, team work is great around your place, gotta love it!! Splinter huh? Let Mikey do it, he can fix anything 🤫🙈👍. Thanks for sharing with us.
Lol
Hi folks Mike here in Texas. Might want to consider shop vac the saw dust into barrels or larger containers and sell it for landscaping or to shops for oil cleanup.
Another option, is to get several more of the totes, keep the plastic liner in, and set them near the sawdust shoot lined up.
Logger Mike !!!
I really like the shirt Melissa was wearing today and the little side dance:)
They say the guy with the most toys wins - Mike has certainly won. Great videos!! Always entertaining. Hello from the island province of Newfoundland on Canada's East coast.
Happy to see you with the new mill Mike! Many hrs of enjoyment. Glad to see you followed-up from my first comment on one of your previous vids on value of lumber Vs firewood. Just bit the bullet myself and got LT40 last year :D
Got a tip for you that's the best of both worlds. When you're running into knotty cores your way better off throwing the log off and turning that core into firewood. Although the temptation is high to keep cutting. Getting the highest values in both worlds. ;)
Happy milling!
You guys make a good team!
C'mon people, tell your friends about 'Outdoors with the Morgans'. Of all the vlogs I watch, theirs is the most fun to watch because there's a different project going each day... Let's get them over 100K by the end of the year! Thanks to all! (No, I've never met them and they had no idea I would post this...)
Just found your channel a couple weeks ago. Enjoy watching you during your lifes adventures. I just live up here by Slippery Rock on a small farm raising Scottish Highlander cattle and cutting some logs on my Woodland Mills band mill. I'm also building a tree house some what like yours but using lumber off the mill and locus posts. It will also make a great deer stand. I saw were you spent some time on the bike trails of Lake Arthur. We spend a lot of time on the pontoon boat down there. Awesome lake. Lots of family history down there for me. Come up and visit some time. I'll give you a tour of the farm.
Bonus footage was really funny
I found that using the wet sawdust for smoking in a smoker is the best. It smolders and don’t burn.
I'm a retired Firefighter; those blue tarps are very, very slippery when wet. No kidding!!! Bob
Hi Mike & Mellisa. You can use sawdust for lots of things. Great for clearing up/absorbing fluid spills. Hardwood sawdust can be used in a smoker to smoke meat and fish.
Melissa, I would go for the leather butt chapps. If you can find any.
A friend i used to work with has an outdoor wood furnace. He was telling me when he can get sawdust he put 3 -4 shovel full in on top of wood in the firebox and he gets up six more hours of heat. Less firewood plus less trips to fill the stove. I'm sure theres other uses for it too.
Just found you guys. Love it. Started with the Cherry and wish you guys would have been here. I build baby beds from downed trees and give them to single mothers who can't afford a bed for baby. May send you a picture of one or two. Never ever though of wood working until I built my girls a small Princess Rocker out of old shipping crates. Still have it. Well keeping up with you for sure. Jim , East TN.
Use hydrolic power when possible and save the back. Love the blue tarp to catch the chips so it is easy to put into bucket - like a large plastic tub.
I LEARNED A LITTLE ABOUT OPERATING THE SAW MILL FROM YOU, THANKS.
Another good video. 👍
The Morgan Milling Company in full production mode. I noticed you've got another couple of IBC totes to put into firewood mode.
The debarker replaces an entire stage of processing in traditional mills. Old style mills run log through a stage which removes all the bark before the log reaches the saw. The Woodmizer uses its little mini saw to clear the path for the main blade. I believe it also keeps trash from being pulled into the cut by the blade. The main blade still gets some wear from bark and trash as it exits the cut. This stuff gets ejected with the sawdust and cannot harm the cut. God bless you all.
I only watch because of Melissa ! Iol
I need me a mellisa! Lol, you go girl!!
Mike, I didn't comment the other day on you video when Melissa was collecting sawdust. But if you used the plastic containers from the totes you use for you firewood, you could store the sawdust in them and sell it to several different businesses around there. Sawdust can be used around any maintenance shop as an absorbent for oil, etc... plus it's great for nurseries as plant food.
Great vid! Well done MM Morgan. Quick story.I happened upon another WoodMizer CZcams channel, SW Sawyer, (apparently there are a few). In one video he (Sawyer) goes to a WoodMizer demonstration at their shop, where they show a number of the models being used. Really cool. The reason for the story is... It looked like they have quite a few tricks and tactics on uses for new Mill owners. Might be worth a look, never know, can’t hurt, might help.
Good morning!
Great video
Gets you where it hurts....fun share....
If I had time..............a sawmill is on my bucket list. Just a few dozen projects to finish first.
Virginia has a ton of clay and making a compost pile is the easiest way I know to get extended good out of it. I like what it does for the soil as usable dirt once mixed with the two. Plus garden spoils work into them well and then people drive for miles to get it. Simple turning of the soil till well mixed and let compost for year. Of course it takes about a year but the mixing only makes it so much better, you get what you put into it and in this case, literally
I like how you use the tarp to make clean up easier.
That's probably the nicest little twin rale mill on the market, I highly like that alot better than the timber king I use to use I run a fully loaded big lt40 super alot now and it's nice with a 14,000lb excavator bringing and feeding it wood but I honestly miss the work sometimes of the timber king I learned on we cut alot of wood on it with 2 362 stihls and a case backhoe you wouldn't believe the stuff we accomplished not to mention selling firewood about 6 months out of the year. Boys grow up and get bigger and better toys but I still miss the simple stuff we started with. I hope to be running a new 75g johndeere excavator and LT50 soon we will see how it goes with cow prices like they are I might be downgrading to a chainsaw mill and cherry picker 🤣
Mike if you have any horse people in your area they probably would be interested in the saw dust for their stalled horses. You two keep up the love for the outdoors and for each other. God bless you both
Band mill dust is not good for most livestock. It is so fine, that the fine particles of dust can enter the animals lungs and cause damage. Circle mills produce a much larger flake, making it the preferred bedding. This type of dust is great for putting in mudholes, and when covering muddy trails!
Thank you for your reply. What I am talking about is not stalled horse’s that stay in the stall 24/7. They are in there just long enough to eat. The stall door are never closed
Just subscribed, needed kids help. Have watched most all your videos. Live up in north dakota. great job on the videos.
👍, great show
Damn. I want one of those. The sawmill is cool too :)
Suggestion: I found in using a mill like yours that I could save a step or two by removing the board after the saw reached the end its run, then back up the saw at a fast idle (without lifting it off the wood), thus brushing off a lot of the sawdust and saving an up and down motion to lift the blade over the wook on the return as most people seem to do. Also, for the sake of your viewers who don't have a tractor you might mention that this saw can be purchased with a hydraulic log lifter, leveler and turner on board.
Another way to think of the de barker. Its a "Trailblazer" for the bandsaw blade. As for the saw dust could you put it into one of the IBC tanks? Then sell/give away for animal bedding or to gardeners. Keep up the great work Morgans!
Another good video! U ought to use the first cut boards, that have bark on them, to side your cabin. Rustic look!
Lot of sawyers call a debarker a mud saw. Cause it cuts all the mud and dirt out of the way of your blades. Nice video.
Love that saw mill. Red oak 12”lumber.....yea that’s real value. Morgan Enterprises....what can we get into next?
Sometimes I use a c-clamp or vice grip on the tine to prevent the lifting strap from slipping off.
Good for compose piles to use in gardens.
im not new but i just liked your facebook page thanks for posting good job
One of the great things about a woodmizer is they hold their value very well so if down the road you decide you would like more hydraulics on the mill you can sell this one and get a new one.
Also was thinking you might want to build a rack to load the slabs into directly off the mill to cut into firewood. Would be nice to have it so when it was full just pick it up with the forks and move it to the side to make the cuts into firewood.
Awesome looking boards, that would be big bucks up here in fort kent , maine !!
Did anyone notice the shirt switch. Mike in plain and Melissa in plaid. Of course they both look good in whatever. I over the years have become rather expert at splinter removal but unfortunately have to draw the line on the body parts I do and the part you got the splinter is off limits for me. I would try that splinter but all family members and the dogs would have to be present. Lol Mike you are doing well with the mill and seem to be getting a lot of usable lumber from the logs.
I don't know if it's been suggested already, but the sawdust can be used for growing oyster mushrooms, and then after it's given you a few pounds of mushrooms, that 'spent' sawdust can be put into your garden beds to improve the soil.
Kiln? Pool first, then kiln! 👍🏻 Shout out to Hanna and Hunter, hope everyone is well, and thanks for the video.
Hi Mike
Mark from Australia
Can you show us the blade on the de-barker and show us the pre cut before the bandsaw thanks
The boards have visible very high quality. Fine mill the 150s Wood-Mizer.
LOL splinters on the butt another great video having nice weather here and in central Pa Just a pop up shower have a great day
watching you saw the red oak, I was thinking of a way to help keep the sawdust under control. Attach one of those vac cart that hook up behind your lawnmower to the discharge chute of the saw. Might need some extra vac hose, then just haul it away.
Dry saw dust is good to shine up. rusty tools: shovels, hammers, nails, rakes, etc
Hey Mike on 418 Melissa said she liked a riding lawnmower with a steering wheel. So what you need to do is get a zero turn cub has a steering wheel on it. You got to check it out
Rump protection! Should be a thing. Love it!
I didn't read all the comments but we used saw dust in the barn on the farm. Maybe some one close can use it
That Wood-Mizer is an amazing tool. Built right here in Indianapolis, Indiana!
Nope. Not anymore. Built along I74 in Batesville, In. They started in Indy.
That cut lumber looks so good!
It would be so much better if it were dry,....note to the BOSS!
Good question on the debarker Melissa. I was wondering the same thing. Now I'm not. :)
On the cost of things; I built my own bandmill with 36 log cut by 21+ feet long. The whole thing ost me $1500 in material; w/25 inch band wheels, 16 hp kohler. I have a winch/4500 lb. from tractor supply that I turn big logs with. The way I load logs is with a 1975 Case 870 Agri King tractor with forks on the bucket.
It feels like you picked up the sawmill just yesterday. I cannot believe it has bee. 2 years already.