Daniel
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Suburban Philadelphia (Wayne)
I wish I could watch the vid. Was it removed?
Of course not... I'm not gonna let a bunch of pussies tell me how to manage my affairs
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I wish I could watch the vid. Was it removed?
"It coming right at me so I'm gonna have to boogie when it comes over"
Your own words and your undercut make it pretty clear that you missed your intended lay by well over 45%'s. Pure backyard hackery.....
Care to explain the horrid undercut, and why you chose to just leave the top/limb hung up like that?
2 tree lost hard to the right.
You do realize your tree didn't clear the shrub, and in fact came up short of the shrub?RICO RICO RICO... a man who acts like he knows what's going on but then composes endless comments that make no sense .. the tree, with the hanging top, cleared the only obstacle and landed harmlessly in a wide-open yard. The only thing needed from that hinge and pull line was to clear the shrub..... The drop zone itself was over 45 degrees wide. Everything I did was enough to make 100% sure the tree made the lay and no more!
The face cut was high because there was a metal fence embedded in the lower portion of the tree, with a funny looking bend and deformation in the trunk just above that, so I was reaching from the ground to make the face cut overhead, another violation of @Tony 's boy scout rules.. Hey Tony.. at least I wasn't one-handing a ground saw from a ladder with no saddle or tie in (balancing that saw like a circus performer) as Buckin Billy showed so proudly...
Was it a nearly "subconscious decision" that made you make that undercut, or was it pure laziness and hackery that kept you from throwing on some spurs and making a proper undercut?All of that was not unexpected. The tree and (of course I saw it was a bit tangled) the top landed in the yard. That was all that was needed. It got done. but of course, I was standing well within 100% height of the fall, so I had to be ready to move. That's just a safety precaution. I do generally stay clear of 100%+ the height of the tree drop zone when the tree is crippled and we are tripping the fall with the machine. And if you saw where the machine was. I explained to the op that the tree could end up going his way so to keep moving back even after the tree went with gravity. So he was well away from me. I could have gotten a little more out of the hinge by leaving it thicker, but with the hanging top possibly locking tips with the adjacent branches I kept the hinge thin enough to ensure the pull was enough to get the top limb free. Those are all the nearly subconscious little decisions that are made to solve the particular puzzle at hand.
The opening footage (0:00-0:17) shows us all we need to know Daniel.. You lost your tree severely to the right, missing the canopy opening by 50-60 degress, and you manage to get your tree hung up in the tree way off to the right. The stilll photo at 2:29 also tell us what we need to know about your cutting expertise.. The tree is fucking 75-80 degrees wide right of the undercuts sighted. That is the very definition of loosing a tree over sideways... I'll bet you meant to do that, huh Daniel? Planned hinge failure and all?
That video has 1.2 million views. Now let's add up all the combined views of all the haters on this thread and see if they can make 10% of that number. 120,000 views. DO you have it? so who's jealous
Nice stick.
Sounds like the customer got taken. $9000 for setting up the job. How did you arrive at that? This sounds fishy, $13500 for a 4.5 hour job this doesnt add up.$13,500 one tree. I subbed it to another company that $750,000 in iron on site and I paid them $4,500 tree was cut up, loaded, and cleaned up in 4.5 hours. 2 75' 4x4 rear mounts, 2 15" chippers with chip trucks, 1 mini skid, and 1 log truck. No stump. View attachment 65579