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Cripple Creek Sawmill
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 3 มี.ค. 2022
A sawmill located in the mountains of Southern Vermont. We make timber frame packages and hardwood slabs.
DISPLAY CABINET PART 2, AND MORE MUSINGS
In this 3 part video series (gone somewhat crazy) Dave and I talk about the reasons for building a wood-species display cabinet for clients to look at, as well as a multitude of other topics including: cracking-loss during air-drying, general species characteristics, teaching clients about wood, buying standing trees, and wood-finishes. About 3 minutes into the video I say "hardwood timber packages", I misspoke, I meant to say "softwood timber-frame packages". If you have any questions, i'm happy to answer them, thanks for taking a gander! -Andy
มุมมอง: 169
วีดีโอ
Sawmill Display Cabinet, and Random Musings, Part 1
มุมมอง 2145 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this 3 part video series (gone somewhat crazy) Dave and I talk about the reasons for building a wood-species display cabinet for clients to look at, as well as a multitude of other topics including: cracking-loss during air-drying, general species characteristics, teaching clients about wood, buying standing trees, and wood-finishes. If you have any questions, i'm happy to answer them, thank...
Woodmizer Design Flaw, And Turning Logs With The Hoist
มุมมอง 2.2K6 หลายเดือนก่อน
We show a closer/un-edited view of how we use the hoist to turn/flip logs and cants. And then I go on a somewhat anarchic rant on machine-building, how machine-design has legacy-implications, and a solution for the problem we had with the woodmizer clamp bars. The Mcmaster-Carr part I refer to in the video to fix them, is sku number 4500K52. Thanks for taking a look, and my apologies for the ra...
Adding A Hoist: Flipping The Monster Logs
มุมมอง 7766 หลายเดือนก่อน
This video is Dave and I explaining our winch setup, and how we thought it through, and why we did it the way we did. It's a bit choppy at times, but hang in there, as there is a bunch of useful info in the clip. I mentioned in the clip that the winch is "probably the 1200lb version", it is not. I mis-remembered. The winch is actually the 2000lb Pittsburgh-brand electric hoist from Harbor Freig...
When You Have To Stop Everything To Repair The Mill
มุมมอง 7996 หลายเดือนก่อน
This is the log that the mill had a "mystery problem" on, from two videos ago. Around 1:30 I realize something is wrong, a bit later Dave mentions something is wrong as well. A few minutes later, i'm still baffled, and at around 7:00 we decide that something needs to be done to fix the mill. I'm curious to know what you all think about the style of video editing I do for the videos. Is there a ...
Why Sawmills Should Never Buy Standing Trees
มุมมอง 2.3K6 หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video we go through the foibles of trying to figure out board-footage yield of a standing tree, before it gets dropped/slashed into logs. It's NOT pretty. If you have any questions, or would like to see anything specific in regards to the sawmill in future clips, please let me know, I'm happy to make it happen! Thanks for taking a gander! -Andy
Cutting 6x6's Out of a Monster Pine Log
มุมมอง 2.4K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
This video shows us processing a large pine log into a number of 6x6's. The editing wasn't perfect on this one, because the size of the clip was causing my computer to freeze (I have to keep the clips shorter in the future). Pay attention for the moment Dave SPARTA-KICKS the log into oblivion. Thanks for taking a gander, i'm happy to answer any and all questions that you have about the mill, an...
Woodmizer LT 15 problem, and solution
มุมมอง 4947 หลายเดือนก่อน
Yes, we are in fact alive! We've been quite busy with construction and milling, but I will be slowly coming back into regular uploads (I have lots of videos recorded, just have to edit them). Hope everyone is doing well, and please ask any questions you might have in the comments, I'm happy to answer them! Thanks for taking a gander! -Andy
Watch Out! Dave Will Cut Your Ash! CCS#83
มุมมอง 1.1Kปีที่แล้ว
My brother Dave, on the woodmizer lt15 wide, cutting the second trunk section of the storm-damaged Ash tree. If you have any questions about the sawmill, or the equipment, or Dave's quirky ways, I'm happy to answer them in the comments! Thanks for taking a gander! -Andy
Milling A Storm-Damaged Ash Into BEAUTIFUL Slabs, PART 1, CCS#82
มุมมอง 1Kปีที่แล้ว
In this video my brother Dave is back on the mill, and milling up a storm-damaged Ash tree from a local construction site. He does multiple walk-alongs throughout the video, and explains why you need to have a flexible plan when sawing, depending on what the log "shows" you as it is being cut. Hope everyone is well! Thanks for taking a gander! -Andy
HIDDEN GOLD INSIDE ROCK MAPLE LOGS, CCS#81
มุมมอง 1.1Kปีที่แล้ว
CUTTING A NEIGHBOR'S ROCK MAPLE LOGS, PLEASE EXCUSE THE AUDIO FLUCTUATIONS DURING THE INTRO OF THE VIDEO. CUTTING STARTS AT 2:00. HOPE EVERYONG IS HAVING A HAPPY NEW YEAR SO FAR! -ANDY
How To Use a Woodmizer Saw Blade Tension-Gauge, CCS#80
มุมมอง 1.6Kปีที่แล้ว
IN THIS VIDEO I SHOW YOU HOW TO CORRECTLY USE A SAW BLADE TENSION GAUGE. HERE IS A LIST OF TIPS: 1)Make sure your sawblade is completely clean of all oil where the gauge is. 2)Make sure your saw blade has NO tension on it, completely loose. 3)Put the indicator on the "blade back" NOT the tooth-side of blade. 4)Screw on static leg. 5)Turn the dial face until the zero is under the needle. 6)Gentl...
Logs Into Oversize Beams, CCS#79
มุมมอง 1.1Kปีที่แล้ว
A new mystery sawyer makes his appearance, some spruce gets turned into oversize beam-stock, and we send along some holiday wishes to all of you! Merry Christmas to everyone, and please stay warm over the holiday season! -Andy
Straight Beam Out of a CORKSCREW Log CCS#78
มุมมอง 703ปีที่แล้ว
MY BROTHER DAVE, TRYING TO MAKE THE BEST OF A TWISTED LOG, AND SOME ADVICE FOR WINTER-MILLING. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, I'M HAPPY TO ANSWER THEM IN THE COMMENTS. THANKS FOR TAKING A LOOK! -ANDY
Battling FROZEN Spruce, Woodmizer LT15, CCS#77
มุมมอง 1.8Kปีที่แล้ว
MY BROTHER DAVE, STARTING TO CUT UP THE PILE OF FROZEN SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK WE HAVE ON THE LOG ROAD. THIS 10X10 BEAM WILL BE A "CENTER-PIECE" IN THE CATHEDRAL-CEILING ROOM FOR THE LOG CABIN ADDITION. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT ANYTHIING IN THE VIDEO, OR THE MILL OPERATION, I'M HAPPY TO ANSWER THEM IN THE COMMENTS! THANKS FOR COMING ALONG! -ANDY
SHIP LAP SIDING, AND DISCUSSING CONSTRUCTION CCS#76
มุมมอง 1K2 ปีที่แล้ว
SHIP LAP SIDING, AND DISCUSSING CONSTRUCTION CCS#76
REAL-TIME/REAL-SPEED CUTS WITH WOODMIZER LT15 WIDE, #71
มุมมอง 1.8K2 ปีที่แล้ว
REAL-TIME/REAL-SPEED CUTS WITH WOODMIZER LT15 WIDE, #71
MILLING 2X LUMBER FROM STRAIGHT HEMLOCK, #70
มุมมอง 6832 ปีที่แล้ว
MILLING 2X LUMBER FROM STRAIGHT HEMLOCK, #70
ORIGINS OF THE SAWMILL BUSINESS, WOODMIZER LT15 WIDE, #69
มุมมอง 1.2K2 ปีที่แล้ว
ORIGINS OF THE SAWMILL BUSINESS, WOODMIZER LT15 WIDE, #69
SHARPENING SHED BUILD PART 3, CUTTING DOWN TREES, #68
มุมมอง 2682 ปีที่แล้ว
SHARPENING SHED BUILD PART 3, CUTTING DOWN TREES, #68
SHARPENING SHED BUILD PART 2, WOODMIZER LT15, #67
มุมมอง 5492 ปีที่แล้ว
SHARPENING SHED BUILD PART 2, WOODMIZER LT15, #67
SHARPENING-SHED BUILD PART1, WOODMIZER LT15, #66
มุมมอง 6222 ปีที่แล้ว
SHARPENING-SHED BUILD PART1, WOODMIZER LT15, #66
DON'T CALL IT A COMEBACK!, WOODMIZER LT15 RETURNS
มุมมอง 1.4K2 ปีที่แล้ว
DON'T CALL IT A COMEBACK!, WOODMIZER LT15 RETURNS
MILLING SPALTED MAPLE, WOODMIZER LT15, #63
มุมมอง 3.6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
MILLING SPALTED MAPLE, WOODMIZER LT15, #63
Wish you were close to me, have so much big downed cherry , most over 35"-30" an have to get it cut up Your like the manual mill or wish you had gone to the 35? Great video, and your workers are great .👍👍👍👍
@douglasbattjes3991 I wish we could get big cherry like that up here! Cherry is the only domestic hardwood up here in the mountains that we can't seem to get over about 18" diameter. I like the lt15 a lot, it's definitely a good mill. For production cutting I would recommend a lt40super hydraulic, or lt50 super hydraulic. It's the material handling and moving that is the true cost of the mill, nott the actual cutting. So if you can cut down on the handling, that's where the efficiency is. Be well! -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I know Andy, all the walking around, setting the holders, moving lumber, back and forth, neighbor down the street from me has a 35 an had it widened to cut much wider logs, He cuts a ton for custom tables that he makes, they are awesome. Where are you located ?
@@douglasbattjes3991 In Southern Vermont, not too far from Manchester.
Great idea. Might do something similar for my sawmill. I have a chance to buy some Black Locust from just up the road but I am hesitant about it. Thoughts? What kind of price would 5/4 poplar boards average? Love your vids!
Our prices are kind of all over the place depending on what we have in stock/how long it has air dried/and how big the order is. For anything aside from pine/hemlock, we are usually $5 a bf to start, and it goes to from there. You should definitely build a small display, your clients will immediately gravitate towards species that they like. How is everything going with the mill/building? -Andy
Around here about the only place I find black locust is where farmers planted it in the corner of a field for growing fence posts. Old farms and abandoned farmland can have big trees there but finding them is the problem.
It's a great wood (great looking and durable) just seems that no one really has much access to it. I've really wanted to get my hands on some Osage orange, just to try cutting it, but I'd probably have to take a 2k mile trip to get a piece lol! -Andy
Nice work! Thanks for sharing 👍🏻
Thanks for taking a look, we appreciate it! -Andy
Another excellent video the best I have seen on the Internet to this date, and I watch a lot of sawing videos. God Bless. ✌️🇨🇦
Thanks for that! There is a lot (probably way too much) musings on random stuff in the next two parts as I go through the species that we carry. Hope you are well! -Andy
Look at you two mountain boys. Wearing all that plaid you look like your from Vermont now 👍🏻😁
The plaid makes the mill run 25% faster😁
Good idea! Tons of beach here, no cedar. BTW, you have about a minute of black screen at the end that won't help your YT stats.
I have to see if I can clip that, thanks for the heads up! Beech is a great wood, i wish we had more of it up here. -Andy
I just turned my first large log with a hoist on my lt 15 wide. My hoist is mounted on a beam above the mill bed, but is offset several inches from center towards the loading side. This has the vertical pull straight up and not at an angle. I am making bridge planks out of doug fir. I might try the improved pipe that you suggested. Thanks for the video.
The hoist makes all the difference! How thick are the bridge planks you are cutting? -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill The bridge is a railroad box car cut off. Cross planks are 4 x 12, 9 foot 7 inch long. I am cutting these from my largest butt logs. Half of the running planks are 3 x 12, and the other half is 4 x 12 mostly twelve feet long. The approach has settled a bit is the reason for the two sizes. I use a grapple on my tractor to help move them.
@netfun8 That sounds like an awesome project. Typically up here people want 4x8 stood on-edge for bridge packages, unless it has to support the weight of fire trucks. Be well! -Andy
really your guys give each other wedgie with the hook need to fine a hobby lol
I have two dogs that are two feet tall for this and they are made to fold down out of the way once I get the log turned where I want it and it will keep the log from rolling off the sawmill God Bless Y'all and have a great day and try not to make it so hard on your self
I would have liked woodmizer to come up with a taller option for at least a pair of these. 10" on big/taller slabs really isn't tall enough when you are trying to keep everything square. We make it work as best we can. -Andy
I have two dogs that are two feet tall for this and they are made to fold down out of the way once I get the log turned where I want it and it will keep the log from rolling off the sawmill God Bless Y'all and have a great day and try not to make it so hard on your self
I have two dogs that are two feet tall for this and they are made to fold down out of the way once I get the log turned where I want it and it will keep the log from rolling off the sawmill God Bless Y'all and have a great day and try not to make it so hard on your self
I have two dogs that are two feet tall for this and they are made to fold down out of the way once I get the log turned where I want it and it will keep the log from rolling off the sawmill God Bless Y'all and have a great day and try not to make it so hard on your self
I have two dogs that are two feet tall for this and they are made to fold down out of the way once I get the log turned where I want it and it will keep the log from rolling off the sawmill God Bless Y'all and have a great day and try not to make it so hard on your self
I see you mostly mill pine for structural lumber. Is it just for your construction company or do you have a lumber yard buyer? I assume it needs to be stamped by a grader.
It varies, and a lot of the municipalities here don't have official code inspections, or building codes. Most of what we cut is for timber packages for builders who hire mobile-graders on multi-million dollar homes. -Andy
In other words a felt tip fairer that does the drawn's that never worked on a sawmill hasn't a clue about sawmill and timber
I think it must be a mix? I've worked "behind the curtain" with a bunch of manufacturers, and it's always a mix of guys in the shop who k own what they are doing, and draftsman/engineers who can do the CAD work, but don't necessarily have enough real-world experience to make things easy to manufacture (or select the right materials for the assemblies). Hope are you are doing well! -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I'm good Andy hope you and all the Family are good great videos
Possibly when WM increased the width of the LT15 to make the LT15 Wide they just used longer lengths of the same material without thinking about longer length of the same stuff means easier bending.
It didn't even occur to me that they had significantly increased the bed width, I just assumed that the lt15 and lt15wide used the same rails. You are probably correct, it significantly decreases stiffness. I have to watch that sharpener vid from you and Dave from the old man and the saw, I just glanced at it, but want to watch the full thing in the next day or two. -Andy
Have y'all had the log stop bolt break from the frame yet...I had one break about a year in, and I got clumsy and broke another one with a log..
No, we have been lucky that we haven't had the bolts snap, but the design for those braces are just.....not great. There is no way to keep the pivot tight enough to maintain squareness, without making them quite stiff to turn. On the bigger logs we always check with a 24" framing square, to verify against the bed rails before we make the 3rd and 4th cuts on all the cants. -Andy
Hey, I'm just happy to see you guy's back in action... thanks for sharing.
I have a bunch more vids that I have to edit, it will be kind of a mish-mash and out of order, but we won't be disappearing any time soon. Its good to be back. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I'd appreciate whatever you can bring my and every one else's way. Thanks
You guys are funny. I enjoyed your discussion about backwards compatibility. It's nice to see you two having a good time working together. Thanks for the video.
I think it's a tough decision for any OEM to make: when do you grow out of the original parts/materials vs just making everything have continuity. We make the best of what we have, that's for sure. Hope you are well! -Andy
Aside from the knots, do you guys have any concern over the strength of beams that are not cut from the heart of the log? Some TH-cam sawyers say a beam should contain the heart and be cut from the center of the log...
Andrew, it's predicated on a lot of different situations. On the east coast of the United States, it's typical to "box the heart" on timbers because most people don't have enough access to huge trees. On the weat coast, timber framers will actually request/specify timbers as "FOH" (completely free of heart, cut outside that zone) because they have access to huge redwood and fir trees. Boxing the heart has more to do with the characteristics of drying. With a severely off-center pith in a beam, it increases the chances of a beam pulling/cambering/twisting as it dries. Ideally you would box all your posts/beams, but it depends on the beam packages you are cutting, how the posts/beams will ultimately be used (ie is it a crane mat? is it a bridge deck? is it dunnage for a rigger? is it a timber frame home?), as well as how soon it will be used after it is cut. If you can, try to keep the heart centered if you have that option. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I am in South Louisiana, most of the pines I am cutting right now are around 26 to 34 inch diameter. Dad lost a couple dozen to last summer's drought...which kind of forced the sawmill purchase. First lumber will be for the Sawmill Shed, about 44x24. Second for my work shop, 55x30ish... I cut two dead pines today that dropped across the sawmill pad. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, your videos are more instructional than they are entertaining and that is what I need most right now. I cannot thank you enough.
@@andrewlewis9300 Absolutely, and just a friendly heads-up: as soon as you slash the logs to length, seal the ends with old paint (any paint will do, most paint stores sell wrong-mixed paint for a huge discount), don't waste your money on anchor-seal. Painting the log ends as soon as you slash them will prevent a lot of end-checking in the log. -Andy
Great information. Thank you for this lesson. I just ordered my LT-15 Wide, I take delivery next week. This is the sort of video I need to see.
I wish you had demonstrated it. Looks like a good solution.
In one of the future videos we will take the time to show a lift in more detail. Andy
Can you tell us what exactly you had to repair? What broke?
Andrew, this was the log that we were working on when I filmed the video a month ago "woodmizer lt15 problem, and solution", I just uploaded them out of order. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I really appreciate you answering, I watched that video just now. I have this same mill on order and your video is very helpful to me.
@andrewlewis9300 If you have any questions about the lt15, or running it, just ask, im happy to pass on what ive learned from running it. -Andy
That wedge comment is a great tip. Does Woodmizer sell it? Looks to be the same orange color they use.
Yup! Look up "log taper wedge for the lt15". It should be $77. -Andy
Very helpful. If I heard you right, you sometimes cut 40" logs. How is this possible with your LT15 Wide? My sawmill (exactly like yours) is not fully set up yet, and I'm copying your setup. I am currently cutting and installing the boardwalk around my sawmill.
The mill has a throat of approximately 33" guide-to-guide. Since almost all longer (16ft) logs have a taper you are going to lose a bit cutting that out. Also, the chordal-height on the first outer cuts knocks a bunch off the diameter. Once you start climbing into the 42"+ range, you have to take a few cuts, then rotate, take a few more cuts, etc. The biggest we've done (a few times) are 52-54" logs, and they really start to max out the capacity of the mill, because you have to slice down the length of the log with a chainsaw to get the log to pass the upright frame members, and also have to take a relatively deep 36" max height pass on your first cut. So you are forced to take a monster slab off the top before you start chopping down. I'd say anything above 42" start to really be a bear and you waste a lot of time in the material handling/log-rolling. If you have any more questions about setting up your mill, I'm always here to help. -Andy
I like your description. Thanks.
Thanks JB, hope you are well out there! -Andy
I did not see a monster log being flipped
I like it. Is this your full time jobs or is there other work you do as well?
I (Andy) own the sawmill, and Dave is a full-time custom home builder. I do my own construction work as well, or help Dave on his bigger projects. When I need a hand on the mill, Dave always lends a hand, there's always a million things that need to be done and never enough time. -Andy
Very handy how old are the 2 draw knifes where the winch hook is
Those two draw files are about 8-10 years old. We have a half dozen of them, and I try to keep them as sharp as is physically possible, it makes all the difference! -Andy
@cripplecreeksawmill thanks Andy we don't see many people using them here in Ireland if you ask the young lad's do they know what they are they wouldn't have a clue
That's the same here. I think it's a generational shift, where most young people would rather play video games or be on social media, vs going out and learning about the real world. I started to see it 15 years ago in the machining trades. Tons of guys leaving/dying/retiring, and having no one to pass the knowledge on to. We live in strange times. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill exactly
Interesting. Just in the last couple weeks I dragged out a new hoist that I've had for 15 years and have been thinking about how to hook it up to turn logs.
Do it and don't look back! The first time we flipped a log with it, it was a complete revelation. Makes it livable most days. -Andy
Nice rig. I wondered how you hung everything. The winch on the floor is a good idea. It's much easier to place the heavy winch on the floor that hang it in the air. Years ago, I hung a massive electric chain fall on a beam. Yeah, that thing is going to go with the building when I sell it. It's been hanging there for more than 30 years. It has gotten much heavier over the years. Great, thanks for sharing your setup. It looks great. Alan
I was looking at electric chain hoists for a new project, and I seem to have forgotten how incredibly expensive they are now! If you have one in good shape, it's definitely worth keeping in working condition, the cost of everything is getting outrageous. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I paid $400 for it used almost 30 years ago. It was old when I bought it. I take good care of it. I can’t imagine how much it would cost now. It’s 480 volt 3 phase.
I believe it. The ones i was browsing for the fall project would be 3500-5000. Its ridiculous. I will keep my eyes peeled for auctions when i get closer to needing it. -Andy
You have to have a planner and a egaer to make it pretty what comes off the sawmill it's ruff cut not perfect you keep that mind set and if you're sawing 1x12x12 you make them 12 ft 3 so it's not perfect.God Bless Y'all 🙏🙏👍
I need to either build or buy a big edger, it's just not efficient to it on the mill. There's a big jointer and a big planer here to reprocess lumber and specialty products. What size track hoe do you have? Are you happy with it? I'd love to get one in the next few years. -Andy
Look at the Cook saw eager that the one on my wishlist bus motor has one they do a lot of videos on TH-cam but they are built right in a small town just east of me they make one of the best sawmills out there they are made too last and they are made just like a big mill you will find at a big company they have solid wheels no fan belts under your blade the only fan belt is on the drive pulley and they sale their self you can find a few people on TH-cam that have them but they are not like wood mizers and pay people to use them and videos of them but I have used both and you could give me a wood mizers and I would sale it and get a cook's they just don't break down as much as a wood mizers I had a lt70 I spent most of my time working on it in stead of sawing.i have a mill that is homemade and it has a lot of cook parts on it if was doing this for a living I would ether have a cook or Baker I have been doing this for many years and if you are broken down you are not making 💰 God Bless Y'all' and good luck with it i dont try to sale my lumber but i sale little bet all along to help with blades and fuil
If I buy an edger it will definitely be either a Cooks or a Baker. Hobby Hardwood Alabama has a Baker, and I hear good things about them too. I'm super happy with my Cooks dual tooth setter, and Cat Claw sharpener. They both have a learning curve, but once you sharpen enough blades, everything seems to fall into place, and you get a system worked out. God bless you as well. -Andy
I have to say that works I have a which just like that and it works great for loading and turning logs if I have time to do it that way but if I'm in a hurry I use my little track hoe and it works a little faster and I have more control but if I'm doing a big log I use my which but it's all good and saves your back I'm 66 and I saw buy myself 99 present of the time but you will get it to where you can do it easier for you.God Bless Y'all and keep it up and stay safe.keep in mind that if it was easier than it would not be so much fun 😊😊😊
Just happened onto your channel. You have the same mill as I do. What are you turning your logs with?
I can see the can't hook and cable. I'm wondering what hoist you're using...brand, lift capacity, etc.
It's quite a coincidence that you asked that because Dave and I filmed a video on it last week, and I'm editing it tonight. Should be uploading it tomorrow. It's a 2000lb electric Pittsburgh brand winch from Harbor Freight. How do you like your LT15, happy with it overall? -Andy
As always, I enjoyed the video. Something always breaks. Right after I put my brand new home built sawmill into service, I blew a main bearing. The thing didn't even have ten hours on it yet. Stuff breaks. I own a machine shop. Stuff always breaks. Things wear even if you stay on top of the maintenance. I made a living for a long time fixing things for machinery that were routinely maintenced. Thanks again for the videos. I just love your saw shed. That is awesome.
I'm a machinist by trade, I had my own shop as well, for 9 years. I wrapped the machine shop up 3 years ago to move up to Vermont. I did mostly manual work, as well as some cnc milling. What sorts of things do you get up to in the shop? -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill I ran a job shop. I ran short run production of machined and fabricated parts. I also did tool sharpening and repair for the locals. I had numerous industrial customers that I did tool building for. I still have the shop and equipment. I closed it 12 years ago, when I started teaching in higher education. I enjoyed my years in the shop. I still putter with it now and again. I built the sawmill because I have an old building in need of repair. I also have a small wood lot and a pile of steel, therefore for sawmill. I want to build an edger next. Alan
That sounds similar to what I had, a job shop with lots of repair and metal fabrication. I also did some hot work/ architectural forging during random spurts when I still had forging hammers. I've been thinking for a year, about building an edger (or some sort of gang saw) if I can't find one cheap at an auction. -Andy
What a nice log!. I have an HD36V2 Norwood mill and this is probably a no brainer, but I have ceramic guides and am thinking of upgrading to rollers, thoughts?
That log wasn't too bad, all things considered! I wish I could give you an informed opinion on the norwood guides, but I can't. What is very interesting, is that woodmizer has solid carbide guides that are sold as an upgrade over/beyond the regular rollers. The only thing that I've heard with the solid guides in general is that they can be finicky, and sensitive to sap build-up. They can also make the blade run hot if they are too-tight/binding. Is it a significant cost to upgrade the Norwood to the rollers? -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill $450 for roller guides. They say the 1/4" down pressure helps stabilize the blade from dipping and rising
@@justinrussell760 Have you checked on Forestry Forum for possible reviews of them? I'm sure you already know this but: I always tell people that how tight you choke the saw is super important. When I cut, I try to keep the adjustable roller guide within 1.5-2" of the face of the log. The stiffness loss on a cantilevered member is exponential, so every inch counts. I see guys sawing with the rollers 6, 8, 10" away from the log face, and I don't think they understand what that does to the quality of the cut on a band mill. Every little thing adds up. -Andy
That's one way to get the sawdust to come up out of the cracks in the floor! 😁 Editing good, some walk around would be good to try as long as it is stablized footage. How did the foot heal up, you don't look to be limping or anything.
I told Dave that we need to do a walk-around at least once, mid-log. I'm super thankful/blessed that the foot/ankle finally healed, it took about 6 months to get off of crutches/cane and another 3-4 to stop limping. Now it only really bothers me when its about to rain, which is happening a lot in Vermont these days. How are you guys, rain-wise? Getting hammered so far? I'm praying for a bone-dry summer up here. -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmillRain, rain and more rain. Then it clears up and just when you go out to work it rains again
@@southernadirondackoutdoors That's exactly what it's been doing here! And what it did here all last summer! You can't plan anything for outside work, and then when you have a clear day, you have to scramble to wrap up when the clouds appear out of nowhere. -Andy
The editing is fine, and as far as the camera angles maybe one from the blade point of view might be nice. By the way you all need a boom plaque like Marks has for sale on his channel/BMP productions.
I'm going to try a magnetic-mount near the saw blade for a few of the cuts, and see if the go pro can handle the vibration. It seems to have odd frequencies that make the auto-correction wander (creates a "slow undulation" on video, because it can't cancel certain HZ bands). I think Dave and I will start making some things once we get to 10k subscribers (youtube doesn't like listing merch for sale until you are at 10k). Lets hope we get there! All in good time! Hope you are well! -Andy
@@cripplecreeksawmill Try a few rounds of copper wire and putting it next to the camera as an external filter. It might help.
I'll bet you the right reason the wood cutters where there is for that reason. Sick tree and afraid to come down. They tricked you.
I really hope that they didn't intentionally sell it, knowing it was rotten. I told them afterwards, but nothing came of it. I take it as a lesson learned. -Andy
So glad to hear that you're not afraid to tackle logs that have been dead for years. My off-grid property gas literally over 1000 dead-standing trees. They'll either be a forest fire or a D-Log cabin as a result of the beetle-kill. Many Sawyers want green logs only.
@sidlawrence4045 I bought the property here as an off grid site as well, and had to drag in power almost a third of a mile. As long as the standing dead hasn't started to rot, a lot of the bigger logs will have good wood. -Andy
I buy standing timber every day plus we have 200 acres. I sell all my grade and veneer logs and I keep the rest for my sawmill. Now on the pine and northern white cedar if i run into rot in the center I still take what I can then I burn the rest
But some are just too far gone.
Absolutely. I should have put in the caveat: don't buy single/stand-alone standing trees, because you can't amortize the risk/cost of it being rotten, over a few hundred trees in a full stand of trees on a timber tract. We have been burning the rotted ones, as well. -Andy
At least i´m not the only one who is getting the middle finger from life
I say it all the time "Doesn't even tick the meter, now". Because of how often it happens, day to day! -Andy
I'd slab it and use for resin tables. We all have made that mistake.
I think in the future we will save them and keep them for customers who are looking to do epoxy-work. It definitely won't hurt! -Andy
A Good Job Guys
Thank you, we are always trying to make the best with what we have. -Andy
You did what you could do Dave. You don't have X-ray vision. Can't fault you for this one
It was a freak thing, the tree looked robust from the outside. The business was taking it down because it was growing out over their building a little too much. An expensive lesson learned. -Andy
The only "mistake" was making an offer prior to them felling it. They likely would have given it to you at that point. But you still got some nice boards and learned something in the process. The analogy is that the meal you paid for wasn't as tasty as you anticipated, and you won't order it again.
@sidlawrence4045 That's a great analogy. I try to take everything with a grain of salt these days, you can't anticipate every circumstance, so we just learn from the lesson, and take it forward. Be well. -Andy
We scaled and bought 21 acres of standing hardwood timber today. 302 trees.
JB, I've been meaning to ask: what's your position in the company? Will they go in with a feller-buncher and knock it out in a couple days? -Andy
@cripplecreeksawmill I am a driver for the Amish mill owner. They log with two horse crews and one crew who use skidders and a yard saw. The mill prides themselves on leaving a better woods behind than we find. I help do some of the scaling of standing timber. We mark and scale the trees our crews will harvest. The mill pays the landnowner before any wood is cut. Our scale of the standing timber is usually within 5% of the mills' actual yield.
@@jbbrown7907JB, I've always wanted to see horse crews work in person! What you said about leaving the woods cleaner is a major thing (up here at least). A lot of the logging crews with heavy equipment leave the tracts absolutely obliterated when they are done, and the landowners are left with a lot of work to make it look half-decent again. -Andy
@cripplecreeksawmill We have two Amish horse logging crews who harvest for the mill. I enjoy watching them when I get the chance.
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Win some Lose some. My neighbor had around 10 acres of white pine logged and hoped to use the money to redo his kitchen top to bottom. With all the red rot I think all he was to pay for with his white pine money was a countertop or two. On the plus side, Dave's screwup got you some good video content 🤣
Speaking of losing some, I just lost my entire typed up reply! it's nice to know that our little area isn't the only one that battles red rot in a lot of medium logs we cut(we almost never see it in logs bigger than 36"). I wonder why that is? -Andy
The tree service likely knew they were ripping you off. They were being paid to cut down the tree. Then you paid them Again Which sucks that they took advantage of you like that
It was a bit of a complex and rushed situation, because I made an offer, had to leave to get the trailer, and by the time I returned, it was a thunderstorm, and they had cleaned up there equipment, aside from the crane to load the logs. So I realized they were rotten, and they didn't want to chip them in the rain. I kept my word and paid, but it's a bit of a pill to swallow, that's for sure. -Andy
If it was black walnut are something like that it would be a great log for a apoxy wood worker
Oddly enough, we've had epoxy table-makers come through the yard, and tell us that our slabs "aren't in bad enough shape to use". It's a hard thing to wrap your head around! -Andy