Video není dostupné.
Omlouváme se.

Chinese low cost sawmill Forestwest 2 YEAR REVIEW

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 23. 02. 2023
  • 2 year Review of my Forestwest 26 inch 15hp Chinese made sawmill and my financial thoughts and reasons for buying it.

Komentáře • 50

  • @joesaccomanno4791
    @joesaccomanno4791 Před rokem +1

    Thank you excellent video. I'm looking at getting a Chinese sawmill for my small shop.

  • @montelott8570
    @montelott8570 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Good, informative video on a budget mill, l thinking of a purchase along these lines. Thanks

  • @TheMonkdad
    @TheMonkdad Před rokem +4

    It looks very very similar to my Woodland Mills sawmill. I mill hardwood mostly. My problem is the diving at knots. I went back to the manual and aligned everything to spec and still get diving.🤷

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před rokem +1

      I find that putting a new blade reduces the diving and going slower does help also. But ya i know what you mean.

    • @user-cz1ki6fo2w
      @user-cz1ki6fo2w Před 6 dny

      I find starting at the small end of the taper does help for some reason. Also I move the guides in as close as possible.

  • @terryslade5067
    @terryslade5067 Před rokem +3

    Sounds like you're familiar and satisfied with your decision, I've often wondered how this mill performed, good job with your assessment and your projects, thank you for your time

  • @Sulihack
    @Sulihack Před rokem +2

    Good video. MY one ton chinese ex came about a month ago, its so nice! Already thinking of getting a 2-3 ton lol.

  • @forestwestca5132
    @forestwestca5132 Před rokem +3

    Hi, Doyle Proerty Maintenance. Awesome video and honest review. Do you mind if we share this on our website?

  • @ToreDL87
    @ToreDL87 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Well, at least it's accurate for what you're doing with it. But easy to see why it's cheap and goes outta whack though, like you said it's way too lightly constructed so they can save on steel and shipping cost. Hence, why you get it cheap.
    Obviously you have a tractor or something to move the logs, so what I'm about to suggest won't impede the portability of that mill.
    Get similar shaped but thicker L profile steel the length of the whole frame, slip it onto the outside of the frame and redrill the holes for the leveling bolts using the (now blocked) OEM holes as drill bit locator.
    Reattach the bolts and your mill as a whole, square and level up your mill with a heavy load on it (lots of slabs), then true it all up and make sure it's level again (Expect to remove supports here and there) and weld the sucker.
    2 inch beads every 6 inches for the whole length ought to beef it up substantially, feel free to drill some holes and weld those up as plug welds too, keep the heavy load on to stop the frame from doing any twisting/bending shenanigans.
    Those square crossbeams are so thin you could dent them with your finger, probably contributes to flex too, add more of them with thicker walls.
    Do the same thing anywhere else you encounter flex/movement/"outtawhack" issues.
    Just.. beef it up using similar but thicker profile steel, re-drill any bolt-holes from the in or outside using the (now blocked) OEM holes as drill locators, add longer bolts, even bigger diameter ones (if you deem it so), where necessary.
    You will be saving a lot of headache and can just get to milling instead of having to true it up when a squirrel sneezes 1000 yards away 😆

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 3 měsíci +2

      In our area I've seen homemade mills built back in the day, you could drive a truck over them and they wouldn't budge. LOL Yes you can make this more robust for sure pretty easily with a welder and steel and some time. Thanks for stopping by.

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@doylemaintenance People got very creative back in the day, they were able to mill enough for their houses so of course the contraptions outlived their use (and their inventors lifespan).
      Also, hope I didn't come across as ornery/looking down upon you. Nice work with everything you've done with the mill so far! You were 💯very clear in the video that you did your homework (we're the same, I overread and overthink as well), knew what to expect, knew what you were getting, you worked around it, saved money, and stayed active! 😊

  • @bespokefencing
    @bespokefencing Před rokem +3

    Great video.👍
    I think you have a great mill there!
    I spent a bit more, ☹ but don't think I got any more at the end of the day.

    • @trevoremonds5696
      @trevoremonds5696 Před 4 měsíci

      Did you build your shed with green wood?

    • @jackmoloney9507
      @jackmoloney9507 Před měsícem

      ​@trevoremonds5696 your the kinda guy I'd like to buy a beer I think.

  • @gerrymcmeel
    @gerrymcmeel Před 5 měsíci +1

    Good video presentation
    Well done to you
    I might think of investing

  • @kenlangille9050
    @kenlangille9050 Před 5 měsíci +1

    seem similar to woodland mill , thanks for information

    • @fencer39
      @fencer39 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Probably made by the same company in China. I had a contact from a Chinese manufacturer that would sell them direct to end user. cutting out the Middle man ie woodland mills ant nearly 50% of the UK price for an what appeared to be an identical machine .

  • @ytrew9717
    @ytrew9717 Před 24 dny +1

    In europe (France) the cheapest sawmill is around 5k€ (vs 2.5k$ in us!), seem no choice to go chinese

  • @thomastevelde8547
    @thomastevelde8547 Před 4 měsíci

    Moving towards of grid,have abundant cedar on site . Have compact diesel tractor. Is there a pot power sawmill

  • @ytrew9717
    @ytrew9717 Před 24 dny +1

    do you think it could saw through oak (is 15hp enough), did you try?

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 24 dny

      @@ytrew9717 yes red oak no problems. I've done lots.
      There is a hardwood blade would work best

  • @terryatpi
    @terryatpi Před rokem +2

    👍

  • @wongndeso_sawmill
    @wongndeso_sawmill Před rokem +1

    semangat boss kuu 🙏❤❤

  • @user-pi6ws8ws5m
    @user-pi6ws8ws5m Před 17 dny +1

    Do you sharpen your blades?

  • @jamesglasgow9358
    @jamesglasgow9358 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Have you ever cut oak?
    If so what thickness?
    How did it do oak?

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 3 měsíci

      Yes red oak, it cuts slower but does it, To do it well I would need to switch to a different blade pitch, my blades are a combo blade which will but both types hard and soft but to cut hard best I need different blades. I've cut 26 inch wide red oak.

  • @lox6461
    @lox6461 Před 3 měsíci

    One question ....how do you replace the tree that you cut down ? Do you wait another 50-200 years ? And then cut the second one or how you do it ?

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 3 měsíci +2

      Thanks for the comment. If you live in a house that's made of wood even just framing thank a Forester.

    • @user-pi6ws8ws5m
      @user-pi6ws8ws5m Před 17 dny

      You don't but what you do is you Hug the tree first so it doesn't feel bad when you cut it . Hope that answers your St_ _ id Question.

  • @silverfox8915
    @silverfox8915 Před rokem

    Good luck trying to get spare parts for anything Forestwest

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před rokem +4

      I have a dealer 3.5 hours away from me in Toronto. Plus from what I see they are mostly universal parts that can be bought from any industrial supply house. eg. Bearings, roller wheels. Blades are common too. There's not much to these mills.

    • @zakbrinkhoff324
      @zakbrinkhoff324 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Parts are easy to find it's all common parts

  • @rogerlayne8623
    @rogerlayne8623 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I don't care how much cheaper it is i am not buying anything from china if i can't save my money and buy American then ill do with out

  • @PoconoPlaces
    @PoconoPlaces Před 9 měsíci

    Presentation is similar to a scammer, even though he is not
    I don’t want to keep guessing when you are going to utter the cost of this thing

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Price is in the video.
      Trust me, I don't care what you think. I'm not trying to sell you anything. Just bringing awareness as you don't need to buy an expensive mill if it doesn't make financial sense.

  • @alextownsend6662
    @alextownsend6662 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Chinese use the cheapest weakest steel. Shortcuts are their way of doing daily business. No thanks.

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 10 měsíci +4

      You realize even the big american brand ones are built in china?

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před 10 měsíci +3

      It's actually the whole reason i did the video, if you can afford a more robust mill than this video is not meant for you.

    • @fencer39
      @fencer39 Před 5 měsíci

      Woodland mills are made in China !

  • @lojza46
    @lojza46 Před rokem

    It is better to support local producers. When you buy a Chinese product, communist China gets richer and that's bad. I couldn't buy a professional bandsaw so I made one at home and paid 650 euros, I have a video of my saw on my channel.

    • @doylemaintenance
      @doylemaintenance  Před rokem +4

      When north American companies build and buy all their products in china but yet I'm supposed to take the price hit. No thanks. The big companies only care about bottom line not patriotism. Congrats on your build though, if I had the time I would build my own too but in the last 3 years I built my home myself due to lack of builders in the area.

    • @seriksson9721
      @seriksson9721 Před rokem

      Lojza46 Link plz?

    • @lojza46
      @lojza46 Před rokem

      @@seriksson9721 czcams.com/video/r4OSug8qEEw/video.html

    • @zakbrinkhoff324
      @zakbrinkhoff324 Před 11 měsíci +3

      The local people need to sell it for a reasonable price. Until then I will buy Chinese.

    • @seriksson9721
      @seriksson9721 Před 11 měsíci

      What is the name of your channel? How to find it.