A labor of love, your father would be proud. It'll pay for itself, heck, it nearly built itself. It's a real operation now and any neighbor who doesn't have a sawmill will come calling. ❤ Don't forget your wife's labor helping. You are going to leave a legacy to your son. One thing... is there a post missing right where you are sitting there, that ought to be holding up the roof over the power plant? ❤ Glad you are getting a return from YT. Looking forward to seeing the channel grow. 🎉 It has been my great pleasure to watch you work, to see that great country in western Wyoming, the goats, family, the struggles in the homestead, the logging, the hay fields in the high meadows. It's a charmed life. Don't take it for granted. ❤❤
Thanks Tom, I enjoy your videos, it is a labor of love and its worth it, maybe you can saw for local folks and make some of your money back in the near future, thanks Tom looking forward to all of your videos
and so glad you went to the trouble of putting this out there, we started looking for help on the mill here on the farm just after you did, but we are still a long way from finished... most of the parts we have now are cleaned up and painted like you did. and some of the wood has been sawed and is stacked... still need that gear, but lots of other projects at the grist mill so... slow and steady on all the projects. thanks for so much details that we needed, our sawmill was just metal parts crammed into a trailer, no wood. your video has been priceless, thanx and good luck in the new year!!
but you have a rolls royce sawmill,cheap woodmisers are 5K and not in same league,I have loved every minuite,you can mill lumber to off set costs,plus your bond with Dad,sharpener mill and history make this magnificent,have not missed one episode❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
so happy you ar finally making somthing from youtune , Yours has become my number one channel ! I enjoy the fact you have something on most every day and they are short and to the point. We love the shots of your beautiful country . Best reguards to you and Mary on the new year.
You make good videos, thanks for the watch. My grandad & his two brothers built a small mill a little before WW2 powered buy disell & then switched to electric after the war for a few years, on their century farm. Then they closed mill.
It was that first trip to pick it up that I found your channel. You’ve been a daily feature ever since over a morning cup of coffee. Do you think at some point you can do a final walk through showing each of the cables, belts, pulleys, and controls with a brief discussion of the operation? It might help for those (like me, but I’m resisting as best I can) that want to go out and acquire one to restore. They are typically in a pile of parts and the person that acquired or inherited it have no idea how it all goes together. Also any notes on things that you remember being hard to find or replace. By now you are probably one of the best experts on TH-cam with this particular class of Corley mills. Thank you. Hope you had a wonderful Christmas and a happy New Year
I've enjoyed all of the sawmill videos. You've done a great job restoring the mill.
I like your show more and more each time I watch it. I understand when you say it's a labor of love.
A labor of love, your father would be proud. It'll pay for itself, heck, it nearly built itself. It's a real operation now and any neighbor who doesn't have a sawmill will come calling. ❤ Don't forget your wife's labor helping. You are going to leave a legacy to your son. One thing... is there a post missing right where you are sitting there, that ought to be holding up the roof over the power plant? ❤ Glad you are getting a return from YT. Looking forward to seeing the channel grow. 🎉
It has been my great pleasure to watch you work, to see that great country in western Wyoming, the goats, family, the struggles in the homestead, the logging, the hay fields in the high meadows. It's a charmed life. Don't take it for granted. ❤❤
@@jeffl3205 thanks for your comments. There is not a post missing in that location there is a huge beam overhead that holds everything up.
Tom it's been a pleasure, been watching since you picked up the mill
Thanks Tom, I enjoy your videos, it is a labor of love and its worth it, maybe you can saw for local folks and make some of your money back in the near future, thanks Tom looking forward to all of your videos
Job well documented and done ,
I have enjoyed and will c
and so glad you went to the trouble of putting this out there, we started looking for help on the mill here on the farm just after you did, but we are still a long way from finished... most of the parts we have now are cleaned up and painted like you did. and some of the wood has been sawed and is stacked... still need that gear, but lots of other projects at the grist mill so... slow and steady on all the projects. thanks for so much details that we needed, our sawmill was just metal parts crammed into a trailer, no wood. your video has been priceless, thanx and good luck in the new year!!
@@josephbarroso3580 I am glad I was able to help you with your project. good luck with it.
very much tom great job.
but you have a rolls royce sawmill,cheap woodmisers are 5K and not in same league,I have loved every minuite,you can mill lumber to off set costs,plus your bond with Dad,sharpener mill and history make this magnificent,have not missed one episode❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@@mechanics4all405 thanks for watching
so happy you ar finally making somthing from youtune , Yours has become my number one channel ! I enjoy the fact you have something on most every day and they are short and to the point. We love the shots of your beautiful country . Best reguards to you and Mary on the new year.
@@davidkraft3690 thanks for your kind words.
You make good videos, thanks for the watch. My grandad & his two brothers built a small mill a little before WW2 powered buy disell & then switched to electric after the war for a few years, on their century farm. Then they closed mill.
Hope you can do some trading w/neighbors & people near you with your lumber to get things done that will be usefull in your endevors.
It was that first trip to pick it up that I found your channel. You’ve been a daily feature ever since over a morning cup of coffee.
Do you think at some point you can do a final walk through showing each of the cables, belts, pulleys, and controls with a brief discussion of the operation? It might help for those (like me, but I’m resisting as best I can) that want to go out and acquire one to restore. They are typically in a pile of parts and the person that acquired or inherited it have no idea how it all goes together. Also any notes on things that you remember being hard to find or replace.
By now you are probably one of the best experts on TH-cam with this particular class of Corley mills.
Thank you. Hope you had a wonderful Christmas and a happy New Year
@@MrZZeroG thanks for coming along with me. I will work on a video of the controls in the near future
@@tractorrescueranch3682 Thank you Tom!