Hello. My father had a small mill when I was a kid. Had a large, large tooth blade a good 32 inches run by a small diesel tractor motor. Of course we loaded logs by hand on the deck/ runner sleigh and pushed them through by hand. Pull back and flipped by hand. Repeat. Had atop and bottom cast iron planer to dress the lumber. Was 100 years old and brown then in like 1980. The rain shower of shavings is etched n my mind along with the sound of the engine . But most of all the screamin* sounds of the steel teeth tearing through the wood I’ll never forget. Love sawmills.Thanks for your posts from Northern Newfoundland, Canada.!
@@SolidToothSawmill That's cool. I was raised not far from there in Pine Grove. Ran all over Amite. First place I had a job after High School was the News Digest News Paper.
Das Wasser ist zum Schutz vor Harz und anderen Verunreinigungen ! Das Sägeblatt bleibt länger scharf und das Schärfen ist nachher leichter!!! Viele Grüße !!!
The boards that are kicked off with live edge…are they left with live edge or are they then milled down later. Seems like would be easier and more efficient to just square it off first thing then mill it on down to the final cut. Again first video ever of seeing this happen from my couch perspective…best wishes
Hello. My father had a small mill when I was a kid. Had a large, large tooth blade a good 32 inches run by a small diesel tractor motor. Of course we loaded logs by hand on the deck/ runner sleigh and pushed them through by hand. Pull back and flipped by hand. Repeat. Had atop and bottom cast iron planer to dress the lumber. Was 100 years old and brown then in like 1980. The rain shower of shavings is etched n my mind along with the sound of the engine . But most of all the screamin* sounds of the steel teeth tearing through the wood I’ll never forget. Love sawmills.Thanks for your posts from Northern Newfoundland, Canada.!
@@sonnylambert4893 thanks for watching 👍🏻
I like the sound of that saw would love to know more about the advantage and maintenance of the solid tooth saws. Beautiful wood, thanks.
@@troytreeguy thank you for watching. I’ll prolly make a video on that in the near future
G'day STS, that saw doesn't even know it's cutting that pine 👍.
@@ishure8849 no sound like a sharp saw zipping through some pine 👍🏻
hi there nice sawing , best to all john
@@fricknjeep thank you!
I was thinking it was draggin right as u said that😂
Def be benificial to have top saw
Amazing.
Best
amazing
Hey buddy do y'all have any precision husky equipment there
@@ericdavis949 our chippers and vibrators and one Debarker is from precision
The reason I was asking is because I work for Precision husky
@@SolidToothSawmill nice
@@ericdavis949 cool! Y’all make some bad ass chippers
@@SolidToothSawmill thanks buddy
What part of Louisiana are you in. I'm in Sulphur, La.
@@jplwoodworks Amite, La
@@SolidToothSawmill That's cool. I was raised not far from there in Pine Grove. Ran all over Amite. First place I had a job after High School was the News Digest News Paper.
@@jplwoodworks cool! 👍
I have never seen water flying off a saw like that.
Why all the water on the blade
@@rickutley931 it’s to keep the blade cool
Das Wasser ist zum Schutz vor Harz und anderen Verunreinigungen ! Das Sägeblatt bleibt länger scharf und das Schärfen ist nachher leichter!!! Viele Grüße !!!
Never milled before but seems like there is a lot of waste and extra work the way you break them down
Thanks for watching 👍🏻 nothing goes to waste. I’m not sure what you mean as far as extra work.
The boards that are kicked off with live edge…are they left with live edge or are they then milled down later. Seems like would be easier and more efficient to just square it off first thing then mill it on down to the final cut. Again first video ever of seeing this happen from my couch perspective…best wishes