Looks like a great splitter for our pine and fir. Are you running off a generator?I've been using a little 5-ton Ryobi for 15 years now. I only split about 5 cords per year and it's mostly lodgepole, and a little larch and doug fir. Might be a little light in the ass for hardwoods.
I'm just running power with a couple 100ft extension cords. I'm only working about 50 yards from the house.Looks like a great splitter for our pine and fir. Are you running off a generator?
Your 1/2 cord wire racks are a slick set up. Easy enough to lift and move with tractor and conveniently sized to load one rack into a garage etc when needed.Like WV Mountaineer said anything to make it easier. For anyone using a gas splitter I put mine on old car ramps and split at waist heigh. I stack it straight into wire parts baskets and move it with forks on my tractor. Only handle it once.View attachment 521843View attachment 521842
You've got a pretty good system for sure, firewood has a tendency to warm you up a few times before you actually burn it .....In the garage I just run one in with the tractor and set it by the woodburner. I built my house with windows that go down to within a foot of the floor and are on both sides of the hearth. I have two 48x20 woodboxes.I have a patio behind the house and I bought a used pallet jack. I set a basket by the window and hand the wood to my wife. I put five foot boards at each end of the boxes so we can stack high.The two boxes will hold a full basket of wood. The wood seasons uncovered for two summers.No stacking and then moving an restacking.
The thing with a splitter is that it has to be part of a process. I split rounds off the back of the truck and straight into storage or back of another truck or trailer for sale. I have used one about 4 years now, just never came up with a good process for splitting by hand. As far as just getting the wood split, quicker to do with axe, but ended up with wood everywhere, and still have to pick of up and put it somewhere.I’ve cut a lot of wood over the years. I burn a lot of coal now. But, I still cut a lot of wood. For my dad, my brothers in laws, and my hunting cabin.
My advice on log splitters comes from a biased stand point. I’ve swung a maul for 40 years. But, I broke down and bought a gas powered splitter. I cut three loads and sold it. Plenty strong. Just real slow.
My experience with electric splitters are minimial. But, they are even slower. And, unless the wood is clean from limbs, crotchets, twist, etc…., it’s going to lack the ump you need with bigger hardwood rounds.
I want to give you a little perspective. Time spent cutting and splitting wood directly relates to effort. The longer it takes your saw to cut into lengths, the more tired you’ll be. The longer it takes to split it, the more time you are working it. Which means you’ll be just as tired using a splitter as using a maul.
My advice would be to buy a professional grade saw. They weigh what home models do but, cut so much faster. That’ll do more for lessoning the work load felt then anything you can do. And buy a maul with a few wedges instead. It’ll be quicker and not feel like as much work.
Here’s me and my brother a couple summers ago. I’m running my worked 372 husqvarna. He’s running my ported stihl 460. We cut two tri axle loads of firewood that day. That’s about 50 tons of wood. All because of the saws.
Just something to consider.
I agree on the splitting. However, I snagged a couple tractor trailer tires when I was burning 8-10 cords a year. I bolted them to a couple huge rounds about 15” high.The thing with a splitter is that it has to be part of a process. I split rounds off the back of the truck and straight into storage or back of another truck or trailer for sale. I have used one about 4 years now, just never came up with a good process for splitting by hand. As far as just getting the wood split, quicker to do with axe, but ended up with wood everywhere, and still have to pick of up and put it somewhere.
On the saw, great advice most people just don't know until they try a real saw. 70cc saw with a 28 or 30 inch bar with skip chain makes cutting wood fun
Those powder boxes are sweet!