Just a couple of weeks ago, a great axeman declared Council Tool the greatest value. These two together compliment each other. Having owned both these units, I must agree with U.L. Any knowledgeable axe orator can talk about these two tools. But who can talk about them eloquently and then demonstrate the effectiveness of the tools. Then to to top it off, stone one to shaving sharpness, all the while being a great father wading amoung wood chips with a goat and chickens conversing in the background. A visually stunning beam and excellent camera work URBANLUMBERJACK....
That is super generous! I’ve looked frequently at your channel for guidance on how to do a TH-cam channel the right way, I really appreciate your encouragement and support!
I've just learnt a new axe related word - shwangle. Beautiful beam. I'm convinced that hewing makes a big difference to how well a log lasts, compared to sawing. I hewed the sill and door frame and a window frame for my log cabin 25 years ago and they are still fine in the wet climate of west Wales with no preservatives (Norway Spruce). I'm sure a sawn sill would have rotted long ago. The only difference, I used a saw for creating the hewable sections before moving on to a side axe. Unfortunately, I was so keen to get the job done that I ended up with carpal tunnel syndrome so bad and persistent that I had to have an operation.
That is so cool! I do believe hand hewn has an advantage over sawn lumber for durability. It does seem to expose less end grain along the length of the log and that could mean less moisture and bug issues. Sorry to hear about your hand! Thanks for the interesting comment!
The favorite of many axe lovers. The Gransfors American felling axe. The Council tool Jersey with Forged in bevels holds its own. But when it comes to precision or carpentry, the American felling axe takes the cake. For around 400 dollars, you too can have your own piece of swedish history. Additionally great video and thanks for the information!
Heck yeah job man !! Wow I’m really diggin that gransfors American felling axe. I too have an American felling axe, but mine is not as fine of an example as yours. I’ll have to measure mine when I get home from work, but it’s quite thick. If I had to take a guess it’s over 25 degrees and I don’t have a file hard enough to cut it to take the cheeks back more. If anything I’ve used it more for splitting or chopping in colder temps. Man I really need to get around to trying my hand a hewing a beam it’s looks like a great deal of fun and very rewarding !!
Really interesting how keen Gransfors makes that axe. I thought it's rare for even high priced axes to be keen these days. A major manufacturer doing it is pretty cool. Excellent hewing. Something truly wonderful about essentially carving on the scale of timber frame lumber. The tie hacks doing 10-40 of these a day is nuts!
Your kid is too cute man. “You making your axe silvuh, and shiny-uh, and more… strong-uh.” He must have little hobbit feet walking barefoot on those wood chips lol. I recently got the CT classic jersey cuz based on your recommendation, looks like I got a good hang on mine but only time will tell. Thx for all the great axe content.
Nice vid! Good show of both the axes. Ive long looked at the GB but never bought mostly because of the longer handles. A 30inch would be great. Awesome work on your part with the broad axe, that thing really showed the advantages of a specialist tool, seemed to get the beam looking nice, pretty quickly. Without a cupped blade they are so much harder to use. Good stuff👍👍🪓🪓
I feel like my tuned dayton is a better chopper and better splitter than my stock jersey. What do you think? Im thinking the jersey will bite much deeper once tuned due to the profile being narrower than the dayton.
I think Dayton v jersey comes down to preference and bit geometry. Generally the Dayton will chop deeper but the jersey will chop more. Both should be capable of being great choppers
Outstanding demo! Just love the detail you present! Also enjoy your interaction with your kid & the goats!!!!❤
Well done and great comparison! I bet your kids have some great stories to share at school about what they got up to with Dad in the backyard!
Thank you! We have had some interesting emails from teachers over the years for sure!
Just a couple of weeks ago, a great axeman declared Council Tool the greatest value. These two together compliment each other. Having owned both these units,
I must agree with U.L.
Any knowledgeable axe orator can talk about these two tools. But who can talk about them eloquently and then demonstrate the effectiveness of the tools. Then to to top it off, stone one to shaving sharpness, all the while being a great father wading amoung wood chips with a goat and chickens conversing in the background.
A visually stunning beam and excellent camera work URBANLUMBERJACK....
That is super generous! I’ve looked frequently at your channel for guidance on how to do a TH-cam channel the right way, I really appreciate your encouragement and support!
You are so underrated this is such a great channel man
Thank you for the encouragement!
Another outstanding job !! Way better than all the others on TH-cam!!
Thx
Great video and thanks!
I've just learnt a new axe related word - shwangle. Beautiful beam. I'm convinced that hewing makes a big difference to how well a log lasts, compared to sawing. I hewed the sill and door frame and a window frame for my log cabin 25 years ago and they are still fine in the wet climate of west Wales with no preservatives (Norway Spruce). I'm sure a sawn sill would have rotted long ago. The only difference, I used a saw for creating the hewable sections before moving on to a side axe. Unfortunately, I was so keen to get the job done that I ended up with carpal tunnel syndrome so bad and persistent that I had to have an operation.
That is so cool! I do believe hand hewn has an advantage over sawn lumber for durability. It does seem to expose less end grain along the length of the log and that could mean less moisture and bug issues.
Sorry to hear about your hand! Thanks for the interesting comment!
The favorite of many axe lovers. The Gransfors American felling axe. The Council tool Jersey with Forged in bevels holds its own. But when it comes to precision or carpentry, the American felling axe takes the cake. For around 400 dollars, you too can have your own piece of swedish history. Additionally great video and thanks for the information!
Thank you agree with all of that. I’m really happy with the steel on this one, It’s very good.
400 dollars😮 in Europe it cost 200€
@tautvydasjponiunas8827 wow that’s Spendy! I paid $280 and thought that was very expensive
Heck yeah job man !! Wow I’m really diggin that gransfors American felling axe. I too have an American felling axe, but mine is not as fine of an example as yours. I’ll have to measure mine when I get home from work, but it’s quite thick. If I had to take a guess it’s over 25 degrees and I don’t have a file hard enough to cut it to take the cheeks back more. If anything I’ve used it more for splitting or chopping in colder temps. Man I really need to get around to trying my hand a hewing a beam it’s looks like a great deal of fun and very rewarding !!
Thank you! Hewing is awesome, I bet you’d love it.
Love a good axe comparison video !
Great job on that beam too !
Thank you!
Really interesting how keen Gransfors makes that axe. I thought it's rare for even high priced axes to be keen these days. A major manufacturer doing it is pretty cool. Excellent hewing. Something truly wonderful about essentially carving on the scale of timber frame lumber. The tie hacks doing 10-40 of these a day is nuts!
I love the carving process of hewing. That GB is definitely keen. Good steel and good grind. I haven’t even touched it with a file yet
wow, great work. 🙏🏻
Thank you!
I don’t know how I ended up here, but I’ve never had the urge to chop wood more in my life.
That’s awesome! A great way to spend a day
Fantastic demo sir!!!! I want both
Great demo! How do you treat the hewn logs to keep them from checking while drying?
I use either anchor seal or sometimes latex paint if it's on sale as a mistint and really cheap. Both work quite well.
Your kid is too cute man. “You making your axe silvuh, and shiny-uh, and more… strong-uh.” He must have little hobbit feet walking barefoot on those wood chips lol.
I recently got the CT classic jersey cuz based on your recommendation, looks like I got a good hang on mine but only time will tell. Thx for all the great axe content.
Haha thank you. He’s a lot of fun to have around! Hope you enjoy the axe, I love using mine
Nice job mate.
Thank you!
Nice vid! Good show of both the axes. Ive long looked at the GB but never bought mostly because of the longer handles. A 30inch would be great.
Awesome work on your part with the broad axe, that thing really showed the advantages of a specialist tool, seemed to get the beam looking nice, pretty quickly. Without a cupped blade they are so much harder to use. Good stuff👍👍🪓🪓
@@kurts64 Hacksaw the GB to 30" Mr. Kurt...
I've thrown a lot of chips at the camera and never have I seen that before
It was pretty wild! Usually I don’t get that lucky and just have 20 minutes of footage with a big chip blocking the whole view 😂
Nice! New sub!
That's awesome, thanks for letting me know, and also watching!
I will bet you would like either one of my broad axes, one is a broad axe and the other is a broad hatchet
Awesome! I do like a good broad axe. So nice to use
...getting a kick out listening to the girls in the background. Cluck Cluck. :) 🐓
I feel like my tuned dayton is a better chopper and better splitter than my stock jersey. What do you think?
Im thinking the jersey will bite much deeper once tuned due to the profile being narrower than the dayton.
I think Dayton v jersey comes down to preference and bit geometry. Generally the Dayton will chop deeper but the jersey will chop more.
Both should be capable of being great choppers
@@urbanlumberjack which one do you prefer for splitting?
How much of an affect does the edge sharpness make?
I’ve found sharpness matters a lot for hewing. When my axe stops biting I tune it up pretty quick
@@urbanlumberjack Have you noticed it being important while chopping?
OF link?
Haha in the works…