What's the best tool(s) to use this wood in a fire pit, and may be the fire place in the winter Also, do I need to cover these?
I was looking at this https://www.homedepot.com/p/Fiskars-28-in-X25-Splitting-Axe-78546935/202681711 all the pictures on HD show those smaller diameter wood, so wasn't sure how effective it would be on those larger pieces. Pretty much why I asked here. I also have a 10" electric saw.
You must buy a gas powered hydraulic wood splitter. 25ton minimum. OR a kinetic splitter if you want to split them faster. You must also build a wood shed to store the splits. Beeb minimum. The Fiskars axes are great. I have a few. If you can't split them with the Fiskars, ask around the neighborhood, and I'm sure a real man could come and help you .
Put a bungee cord around the log so you can keep splitting it without flying wood chunks or the need to set the large piece up because it falls over.
Just got an axe and split some wood, however, theyre rather large pieces that I really should cut down with a chainsaw first. You chainsaw nuts still saying Stihl per the chainsaw thread? I have some average size trees that will be susceptible to strong thunderstorms this year. Cover or shelter your wood from rain or snow so it dries out.
Been using one of those little electric/hydraulic 6 ton splitters for 6 years now....5 to 7 bushcords a year.Little bugger will split stuff over 20 inches in diameter.They always seem to be on sale up here
I was doing some at my older brothers last year... just used a regular old axe. Not as efficient as a splitter but did about 40 logs. My younger one tried it and missed a few times...lol
Stihl all day every day. Not saying there aren’t other good saws but my oldest mid size stihl is 35 yrs old and been through more chains and bars than I can remember. I have big and small stihls that are only 13 yrs old with only an acre or two on them. As long as you store with ethanol free mix they’ll last for generations. I’ve never owned a splitter but I’m headed that way for sure.
I used a fiskars splitting axe for 6 cords, it worked great and it’s a good workout too. Even missing a few times the composite handle never had an issue.
Old take off tire....Nail it to a stump...place all.small round logs inside and chop away... the tire prevents them from falling out for all cuts and you dont have to bend over and pick them up all day...oh...and a Maul....a sharp one...
I used to have a couple rear takeoffs I'd stack up. Stand as many rounds as you can fit inside the tires, and start swinging, working my way around the tire. I don't burn much wood anymore, but we used to heat with only wood and I'd split most by hand (4-5 cord/year). Great workout and goes faster than a hydraulic (just can't do it all day like running a splitter). I'd take one or 2 pops at a rounds and if it didn't split right away I'd toss in a pile. When the pile got big enough I'd break out the hydraulic splitter for those and all the other crotch pieces. I always scoffed at those plastic axes until I tried one. The fiskers ones are really good.
That was an old beeb reference about some divorce victim who not only went to his ex' house & stacked her firewood while the new penis was watching him sipping a beer... but had the cuckoldhood to come onto the beeb & post about it.