Don't tell my wife how I did this! Wood-Mizer sawing "impossible" HUGE Pecan log

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 367

  • @JG24AJ
    @JG24AJ Před 5 lety +4

    You make it look sooooo easy, but like you said in a earlier video, with the HUGE maple, in a nut shell, trial and error makes your work smarter not harder. Thank You so much for sharing!

  • @outdoorswithlarryrobin

    Ran my HVAC business for 31 years doing jobs what others said was impossible, Beast of Log! Good Job!👍🏼🇱🇷

  • @outdoorcountryboyforlife6511

    lol, absolutely amazing. ingenuity, thats how you get a job done. I've had my LT35H for a year, and have figured out, like you, how to push it beyond its limits. that was one nice log. good job my man.

  • @edkemper4385
    @edkemper4385 Před 7 lety +6

    I'm a WoodMizer operator also. Great job. Shows what can be done with a little effort.

  • @WallysPlace66
    @WallysPlace66 Před 7 lety +32

    I have a great appreciation for those who are told it can't be done and they go and do it... and do it well. My dad was a machinist. His boss would tell him it can't be done. My dad would say, don't tell me it can't be done and he would go out and do it. I'm not a professional at anything but I'm like my dad and when someone tells me it can't be done I go and do it. Great video

    • @johnstewart8849
      @johnstewart8849 Před 6 lety +2

      WallysPlace66 Your dad’s boss was one smart manager!

  • @pacificcoasthiking
    @pacificcoasthiking Před 7 lety

    I am so happy to see other people doing what you did in this video. One of the best things using a wood mizer is that it has only one mast. If there were two, this job would have been much harder.
    For welder bob. Yes, you could have cut the log lengthwise in half and milled it, but that is quite a project too. You could use an alaskan chain saw system to cut large cants as well. Lucas Mill also has a slabbing system. It is just a pretty big project milling logs over the 24" throat width, and you have to whittle it down to get it down to at or just under 24".
    I have done so many of these larger logs out here in California. Redwoods, walnuts, and huge pines. You can do it, but it mostly gets done the way this guy has done it in Indiana.
    Canaan Addison, yes on what you are saying, especially to save the jacket board if valuable enough. Other wise I like how this guy did it, cut the jacket board close then try to back it out, if that fails then detach the blade and work it out. I have cut blades that have locked into the wood and bent a little, making them bad blades anyway. This happens a lot just after you hit a nail, right? :)

  • @kimeverhart6253
    @kimeverhart6253 Před 4 lety

    From a concerned nurse and wife whose seasoned farmer husband who lost the sight in one eye from a freak chainsaw accident...I can’t tell if you are wearing eye protection. Please, please do!! Just a little piece of dusty wood can fly into your eye, hit the wrong spot and you lose the site forever in that eye.
    I don’t want that to happen to you...
    Ps. I LOVE your videos by the way!! My Dad was a woodworker all my life and appreciated the beauty of the unique and flawed pieces the most. I learned from him.

  • @bwillan
    @bwillan Před 7 lety +12

    There is a video from Paul at Canadian Woodworks called "Cutting a Sawmill in Half". It shows how he modified a Woodmizer mill to allow the saw head to extend out further to give a wider maximum cut.
    I will say that the ingenuity shown here on how to manipulate the log to make it fit your mill capacity is quite good. I am sure the customer was happy.

  • @Shawn-rq4py
    @Shawn-rq4py Před 7 lety

    It looked large just by itself but when you stood beside it, it really showed exactly how large this tree was. It's good that it's going to good use by becoming some type of furniture etc instead of being used for firewood

  • @toonybrain
    @toonybrain Před 7 lety +14

    LOVE your can-do spirit - the kind that made America.

  • @TrustNotta
    @TrustNotta Před 7 lety +2

    Exactly the reason why I purchased my Lucas vs a woodmizer. Although the kerf is much bigger I have no problem milling logs 60" across. Maybe you should consider an Alaskan mill for getting larger logs like this down to a size that your woodmizer will comfortably mill. Not taking anything away from what youve done in this video btw. Good job. Looks like some nice lumber.

    • @southernindianasawmill1367
      @southernindianasawmill1367  Před 7 lety +1

      If I could, I would have every type of mill available! They all have positives and negatives, but for me the Wood-Mizer is the best for all out performance and waste. This mill will do 99% of what I encounter on the job and have had very few problems maintenance wise. If I ever get into doing huge slabs, this mill will not work, and other options will be necessary. Thanks for watching and for the feedback!

  • @CanadianCuttingEdge
    @CanadianCuttingEdge Před 7 lety +1

    It was fun watching you work in large part just because it reminded me of home. southwestern Ontario (Canada) looks a lot like that. I grew up at the very edge of a small town, so I spent my childhood walking and biking through rural areas that look a lot like that.
    You content on the mill was cool too.

  • @Hertog_von_Berkshire
    @Hertog_von_Berkshire Před 6 lety +3

    Nice work! For me the best bit is seeing the grapple-table jiggling the log into position.

  • @MikeBratcher
    @MikeBratcher Před 6 lety +3

    I feel your pain. I have done this both ways (cut in half first and also not cutting in half). One thing I would have done differently was that once you finally got the lumber cut to your final width, gang them up and cut 3 or 4 at a time. We usually do 3. It goes a lot faster than the one at a time method. Sharp blades are a must though. You don't want the blade to wander

  • @olddodger7178
    @olddodger7178 Před 7 lety

    I had a 35" (small end) by 12' poplar last March. I used the same method as you. No help that day, it took nearly all day to mill it into a small trailer load of 1"x^6' on my LT40. Thanks for the video.

  • @xgi36
    @xgi36 Před 7 lety +5

    Great job. Bet that made a beautiful floor. I started working in a sawmill when I was 17 love the smell of fresh lumber. Thanks for posting.

  • @kennethewald1189
    @kennethewald1189 Před 7 lety +4

    Great videography! So interesting to see you improvising to make it work with your equipment.

  • @edsmith4414
    @edsmith4414 Před 3 lety +2

    Ahahaaa......I did the same thing with a 20' x 40" red oak that blew out root ball and all in a yard. I backed the mill under the whole thing, then cut it off landing it on the mill (no way to handle a log that big). Then had to chop on the butt end with a chainsaw to get the first few cuts because it was bigger than the throat opening. Turning is was another adventure, as my LT40 is manual ! Got 1000 bdft of beautiful red oak lumber out of one log.

  • @mikemayfield7716
    @mikemayfield7716 Před 5 lety +1

    My Dad used to always say The hard stuff we do easy the impossible just takes a little longer!

  • @ynotski9
    @ynotski9 Před 7 lety +3

    Loved the Ghosting from 11 minutes on.

    • @tygs6984
      @tygs6984 Před 7 lety +8

      Hated it and stopped the video

  • @sawmillpete6591
    @sawmillpete6591 Před 7 lety +8

    I run a LT40 also and climbed on big logs with my chainsaw numerous times. About halfway done your arms hurt, you can hardly hold the darn chainsaw anymore and you tell yourself: This is the last one. Nothing bigger than 28" from now on. But once you are below the magic 28" the reward is huge. Congrats brother, good job. Keep up the good work.

  • @dave-in-nj9393
    @dave-in-nj9393 Před 4 lety

    have to say that the overlapping was some of the best video I have ever seen

  • @jeromefink2361
    @jeromefink2361 Před 5 lety

    Mike and Melissa you guys do an excellent job love you guys

  • @tedjohn441
    @tedjohn441 Před 7 lety

    Great job all things considered. It was obvious that you wanted to get every board you could out of that log.

  • @jimmyjordan1685
    @jimmyjordan1685 Před 7 lety +3

    Good work . A lot of folks think this is easy and they don't understand the difficulty of milling this size log due to its short length and width . I find it very time consuming with this size of log , but it always yields beautiful wood . Like you I like the challenge . I love my work !

  • @dennisschlicher3367
    @dennisschlicher3367 Před 7 lety

    First off awesome job. I had a 40" pignut hickory log on my lt35 manual and after a lot of manipulation I had to give up the log actually rolled off the mill at one point when I tried to roll it. I explained to the customer and apologized that was not going to try that again. And Franklin brooks large sawmills are fine and dandy if you have a way to get the wood to the mill, portable sawing saves the customer time and money by being able to do it onsite to top it off most large mills wouldn't waste there time on one or two logs. Indiana sawmill thank you for the video

  • @jamesspears5127
    @jamesspears5127 Před 6 lety

    I have a Norwood Saw Mill and I have done everything that you have done cutting cypress. I have had blade's stuck. I have had them break I have had the mill stuck. IT makes for an interesting day

  • @rabwoody264
    @rabwoody264 Před 7 lety

    Well that was strangely compelling, especially when you had the ghosts helping towards the end :) ... thumbs up!! thanks

  • @jamesdurand3019
    @jamesdurand3019 Před 5 lety

    I had a man with a Woodmizer mill make the lumber my shop is made of. I had cotton wood logs some of them over 4' in dia. and about 30' long . we make mostly 2x6" -12' wasted a lot of wood cutting them down to where we could get the saw over and through the log. Made a good shop but was a lot of work. Been there!

  • @jasonflay8818
    @jasonflay8818 Před 4 lety

    Great work ripping, also great video, I really enjoyed the double exposure portion.

  • @rfcomm2k
    @rfcomm2k Před 7 lety +8

    I had a black walnut log that was too heavy for the hydraulics also, and too big in diameter at one end. I trimmed the end down with chainsaw, then to get it up on the Woodmizer deck we stuck a cant hook in it with a strap and used the Hummer and the hydraulics together to roll it up there. Then used the Hummer and cant hook to help roll the log until the hydraulics could handle it. Got 1100 bd ft from that 12' log

  • @1Ma9iN8tive
    @1Ma9iN8tive Před 4 lety

    I’ve always loved wood ...all things wood. Furniture, instruments, sculpture.
    Personally I know nothing about wood, milling, or lumber.
    But my grandfather was a woodsman and opened the first mill in our home town.
    Guess it’s in my blood.

  • @David-fv7zg
    @David-fv7zg Před 4 lety

    I have several short logs like this that are too large for my mill. I had planned on splitting them in half with a few wedges, you method deserves some consideration as well.

  • @wrcummings
    @wrcummings Před 7 lety

    You and your crew sure work fast. So fast that at one point I could see you were beside yourselves as you worked.

  • @allangooge9679
    @allangooge9679 Před 7 lety

    Amazing to watch. Also knowing other sawmills couldn't take it on. Right on man. 👍🏻🇬🇧

  • @bobcrone6151
    @bobcrone6151 Před 5 lety +1

    Very nice indeed. Would be cool to see a short clip or still image of the floor fully installed. I’m sure it’s gorgeous.!

  • @kennethmueller7014
    @kennethmueller7014 Před 4 lety

    Just watched a couple of your videos , milling big logs is always a challenge ,especially when you have to cut them down with a saw to make them fit the mill .As a fellow sawyer and woodworker I know all too well the challenge , great job ! Wish I could see how the flooring turned out ,I'll bet it was beautiful ! Have an awesome day and keep making videos :-)

  • @BT-cr6xb
    @BT-cr6xb Před 7 lety

    I love it when I can complete jobs others have turned down. Well done on your part. I have a big 60" bar alaska mill that I'd have used first to facilitate the milling. I made the purchase within a few weeks of the band mill simply because it was a lot faster and less muscle effort in the beginning. We have a lot of big oaks and pecans in the south. I find it sad though that people tend to go after and remove the biggest trees instead of cutting the smaller ones. Such a waste.

  • @raheem274
    @raheem274 Před 7 lety

    If you would like to make easy rotate, just add two chuck like lathe(turning process) on slides. these two chuck support on hydraulic to lift the wood up and down in order to prevent contact with frame during rotate .
    Regards
    Raheem

  • @tompritch56
    @tompritch56 Před 7 lety

    Good to know you guys are not too far from Madison.

  • @iainmcphersn
    @iainmcphersn Před 7 lety

    I enjoy watching you take these big logs apart. I would like to see an analysis of the yields some times as well.
    Just a walk thru explaining these pieces are scrap, these are for rough work work, these are for finish work, and some of the nice grain patterns. Maybe an idea of how many board feet are usable from the particular log.
    Thanks

  • @taparker4896
    @taparker4896 Před 4 lety

    Not to bad for a Southern Indiana boy, that's from one Southern In boy to another : ) : )….. I've been transplanted to Alabama some odd 55 years ago. Married a girl from LA (Lower Alabama) and kind of stayed. Still have Kin in Evansville. You All take care catch you on the flip flop.
    TA

  • @joeelias2515
    @joeelias2515 Před 5 lety +6

    Unfortunately, it was my wife that first saw this video and brought my attention to it, lol... all the same, a dextrose effort you put in there

  • @michaelstafford8530
    @michaelstafford8530 Před 5 lety +3

    There you have it good old southern Indiana engineering at its finest!!!!

    • @johndavis1847
      @johndavis1847 Před 5 lety

      Listen Dude, that Indiana engineering is bullshit. That operator/owner should have prep that log first before sawing.The amount of time he wasted prepping on the ways of that mizer cost him money in time. And old term that has been used forever is called ( money cut) but you know anything about that city boy.

  • @randalljones3661
    @randalljones3661 Před 7 lety +1

    I have several this size I'm milling. They are 9' 6" long. I estimate 7500 lbs. each. I use a Peterson Swing mill. Just roll it between the tracks and don't even try to lift it.

  • @1967250s
    @1967250s Před 6 lety

    That looked like fun, hard, but fun. Nothing like doing a hard job and being successful!

  • @garybiggs9010
    @garybiggs9010 Před 7 lety +1

    Everyone says to rip it in half. I would have cut kerfs then chipped the chunks off. Rotated 180 and did the other side. Then the other two sides squaring it up to manageable size. If you do this on the ground and get all the waste off first, you may also be able to put a once too heavy log up on the saw. Depends on how easy and straight the grain runs to split off the chunks.

  • @woodlouseindustries-localt9887

    Lovely bit of timber! With the big logs on a Mizer, you can cheat a bit more capacity for the head by making the log hang a little more over the main bed tube. Either by dropping the support arms a little (no fun on a short, fat log), or chainsawing small vertical channels where the log will contact the support arms. We've had some silly large sections on a couple of Wood Mizers, I always feel like I'm quarrying :)

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo Před 7 lety

    Great stuff. Fascinating to see how people approach challenges. They seem to be the mist rewarding.

  • @jlgoins64
    @jlgoins64 Před 7 lety +11

    I love the way Pecan looks after it's finished...

  • @billpotter8714
    @billpotter8714 Před 7 lety

    Nice job, I travel from South Dakota to Bedford several times a year and general haul some wood home. Always enjoy the French Lick area. Thought the area in the background looked familiar.

  • @johnsobj
    @johnsobj Před 7 lety

    That should really be great flooring. Subscribed and looking forward to more videos. Thanks and happy new year.

  • @josephinehogg3629
    @josephinehogg3629 Před 5 lety

    love your videos. Here in Australia, we do grow Pecan and Maples trees, but we don't have trees like Maple and Pecan IN THIS SIZE. These are HUGE! at the end of your Maples milling, you poured water over the finished cuts to show us the grain, but you didn't do that on this video. Please give us a wet wash in your other videos

  • @bill45colt
    @bill45colt Před 7 lety +3

    ive a 54" red oak 29' long and 29" at the small end,,,,,been tangled up trying to figure what to do with it,,,,lotsa lessons here,,,,thanks for the help,,,,great film

    • @tedc3895
      @tedc3895 Před 4 lety

      Split with black powder.

  • @AttitudeAdjuster
    @AttitudeAdjuster Před 7 lety

    Wow that is a tough job, lots of fun had I would say but that is how you learn, by taking on the tough ones rather than all the easy jobs

  • @jldossey45
    @jldossey45 Před 5 lety +1

    Hmmm Wood-Mizer. I had a friend who once invented a saw and I believe the company was called Wood-Mizer. Ironically I lived in Southern Indiana at that time. This was a neat operation...John Dossey Cincinnati Ohio

  • @Tonnsfabrication
    @Tonnsfabrication Před 7 lety

    Looks like Brown county area, I have some mushroom seekers that make it over this way from that area. Nice job on the mill, would be nice if you'd show that stack of lumber that came from the log.

  • @jeffcouture6048
    @jeffcouture6048 Před 6 lety

    Bravo! I wonder though if your loader could have lifted the log ok with an assist from the bobcat. Also, I've had luck turning the big guys using rigging slings in choker mode, with forks or a bucket. Seeing as I have no hydraulics, that has been the ticket. I enjoyed watching you gnaw this beast down!

  • @StuartChignell
    @StuartChignell Před 7 lety

    I hear you too.
    I've already got a lucas but I want a bandsaw mill as well for that reason and to be able to cut much wider boards.

  • @heknows5418
    @heknows5418 Před 5 lety

    Lost 7 pecan trees 75-80 years old tried for months to find someone with a sawmill to cut them. Lot of promises all no shows finally county hauled them to landfill , we had storm assisted funds to dump them but not to mill them, yeah I cried when they were hauled off..

  • @hughbo52
    @hughbo52 Před 5 lety +5

    Dang,wanted to see what the cut pieces looked like.

  • @user-gy3tn2xt6h
    @user-gy3tn2xt6h Před 3 lety

    You saved a lot of that Beautiful Maple wood.

  • @darrellblanchard5887
    @darrellblanchard5887 Před 7 lety +6

    when I want to mill large logs like this I split them in half with wedges till I can get a siscor Jack or two in the split. this helps get the most yield from your wood

  • @pacificcoasthiking
    @pacificcoasthiking Před 7 lety

    I kind of agree with the people who say there is too much funny video tricks on this. But it is fine. I would not do the start and stop on the wood mizer. I just keep em running, and let the wood stack til I have time while cutting to off load and stack, but everyone does it a bit different.

  • @winnielessin169
    @winnielessin169 Před 5 lety +3

    Wow. Great work on those huge logs. This video has given me some ideas on my next welding project to use my powerarc on.

  • @tangobango9653
    @tangobango9653 Před 5 lety +3

    You work hard & are very good at what you do. Wish I were as skilled as you are my friend.

  • @BEder-it4lf
    @BEder-it4lf Před 7 lety +5

    That could have been Coffee Table or Rocking Chair made in one piece. Shape with a chainsaw, finish with a sander then stain and seal.

  • @OMGaNEWBIE
    @OMGaNEWBIE Před 5 lety

    WOW! You have the same talent/precision as that of a highly sought after diamond cutter.

  • @ericsarchive7718
    @ericsarchive7718 Před 5 lety +2

    That cut at 10:04 made me a bit queezy. That pattern would of made a great slab.

  • @galenledbetter8014
    @galenledbetter8014 Před 6 lety +1

    I applaud your efforts and love the never say die mentality...how many bands did you go through? We have been milling with our Wood Mizer since 2008 in the Piedmont region of NC. One lesson we have learned in working within the limitations of our unit is that sometimes you have to say no. Invest in a 4ft bar and half nextime.

  • @timberdoodles4647
    @timberdoodles4647 Před 7 lety +19

    I always cut from the big end first. Getting hung up just as you exit the cut is a bugger.

  • @odatmatt
    @odatmatt Před 6 lety

    I had a LT-40 and remember sawing oak logs so big we had to blow them apart with black powder to get them on the mill.

  • @paulgamblin1860
    @paulgamblin1860 Před 5 lety

    If you know some wood turners, some of those blocks you cut off would make excellent bowl blanks.

  • @dcw1540
    @dcw1540 Před 5 lety

    Love your fast forward.

  • @montanastyle9614
    @montanastyle9614 Před 6 lety +2

    Very nicely done, would have loved to see the finished stack and a look at the grain...

  • @laurakirk9988
    @laurakirk9988 Před 5 lety

    Great video, you are a true AMERICAN CRAFTSMAN! OUTSTANDING! Thank you Sir!

  • @thomasr.miller5553
    @thomasr.miller5553 Před 7 lety +3

    OK , You should have sawed the log in half .Then quarter sawn OR used a trip mill with 26 inch blade .Less waste .. thanks for share ..

  • @eddieeifling3406
    @eddieeifling3406 Před 7 lety +2

    Pecan is great wood. The scraps are great for smoking meat. A lot like hickory, only milder.

  • @philrant2408
    @philrant2408 Před 6 lety

    Great video, great sawing, thank you.

  • @ronaldjackson2437
    @ronaldjackson2437 Před 7 lety

    Hope your customer has better luck than others I have seen use pecan for flooring. Lots and lots of shrinkage and movement.

  • @ewspankify
    @ewspankify Před 6 lety

    The Bandit was told it cant be done, but he done it.

  • @jdscrips2759
    @jdscrips2759 Před 7 lety +1

    I love working with pecan!

  • @EODSnowboarder
    @EODSnowboarder Před 5 lety

    As I watch this video, I can not stop thinking about how much waste is happening here. Every piece of wood that he is cutting off with the chain saw is 100% usable!

  • @drgopta2180
    @drgopta2180 Před 7 lety

    I'm going deep into the sawmill rabbit youtube hole.

  • @appalachianmountainman8126
    @appalachianmountainman8126 Před 7 lety +15

    when we have got a hung blade we drive a plastic wedge in the back and can usually get it out.

    • @JosephdiCaro
      @JosephdiCaro Před 7 lety +1

      Canaan Addison that's what i was thinking he was gonna do

    • @skeetorkiftwon
      @skeetorkiftwon Před 6 lety

      Canaan Addison
      I was thinking the exact same thing lol

  • @sertifiednerd
    @sertifiednerd Před 7 lety

    been there done that . These big logs try your patience. my hat is of to you

  • @user-ey2ns7ee3c
    @user-ey2ns7ee3c Před 7 lety +4

    If you ever run into that situation again try using a chainsaw to split the log in half. Even if cannot get all way through just throw in a wedge and split it in half. Easy pessy, rest is breeze.

  • @dlwatib
    @dlwatib Před 7 lety

    Don't do double exposures, please!
    Kudos for your persistence and ingenuity.

    • @Wetkeazle
      @Wetkeazle Před 7 lety +1

      Have a couple of drinks and the double exposure starts to feel natural.

    • @stephenjstclair
      @stephenjstclair Před 7 lety +1

      loved the multiple exposures.

  • @dgsports69
    @dgsports69 Před 7 lety

    Only a little hard time. Great little mill

  • @JWabinski
    @JWabinski Před 6 lety

    That edit near the end of the video was trippy I thought I was seeing things at first.

  • @bobbg9041
    @bobbg9041 Před 5 lety

    I'll take the scrap's Nice job and editing
    Makes me wanna go buy a mill and start doing urbin sawmill projects.
    Wood Mizer is a branch of woodmaster, you could hire a crew cut down the trees or pick them up after a storm sticker the wood, buy the equipment to plane and make moldings out of the downed trees after a storm and we have a lot of them in Kansas City.
    Local machines, local wood, local trim.
    So if you drop a tree that big will the ground spring back up some after its gone? a tree that big weights a lot and I can only think how much force its putting on the soil in that spot I know the roots system is as big as the top of the tree so it has a large foundation and that's spread out over a large area but you still have to wonder about that.

  • @arturoverde3807
    @arturoverde3807 Před 6 lety

    I’m not a expert with saw mills... but would it have been easier to cut one edge first,put that at bottom and the work down?Just a thought!
    What you achieved was amazing,stay safe.

  • @kutzbill
    @kutzbill Před 7 lety

    Just in passing, you probably already know, but if you sharpen the chain at a 10 degree angle, it rips much better than the 35 to 37 degree angle.

  • @nickdawn3985
    @nickdawn3985 Před 7 lety

    That would have made some nice slabs leaving it full length and using a chainsaw mill. Thanks for sharing.

  • @monkeyship74401
    @monkeyship74401 Před 7 lety

    I hope someone got to keep the scraps. I find Pecan to be one of the better woods for smoking pork and chicken.

  • @jdscrips2759
    @jdscrips2759 Před 7 lety +2

    Pecan! it's a hard ass wood!

  • @StuartChignell
    @StuartChignell Před 7 lety

    Tricky job for a band saw.A Lucas mill would have been handy for a job like that.

    • @TheIdeasGuy
      @TheIdeasGuy Před 7 lety +1

      Stuart Chignell I'm hearing you, but the thing that I personally love about band saws over Lucas mills is the blade thickness. Skinny blade = less waste.

  • @DrTune
    @DrTune Před 7 lety

    Really hypnotic - well edited! :-)

  • @wolfgtweb
    @wolfgtweb Před 7 lety

    Enjoyed the video. Would have been nice to see the stack of boards created.

    • @southernindianasawmill1367
      @southernindianasawmill1367  Před 7 lety

      Gregory Wolf check out the instagram soindianasawmill. There are photos on there.

    • @wolfgtweb
      @wolfgtweb Před 7 lety

      Southern Indiana Sawmill LLC I have never been on instagram and probably never will. I shouldn't need 2 or 3 different apps to get a whole story. But thanks anyway.

  • @cruzanmongoose
    @cruzanmongoose Před 5 lety

    I usually just stand up the section of log and cut it on the ground to the dimensions between the blade guides. in my case 30 inches.