Daniel
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Suburban Philadelphia (Wayne)
it was irrelevant to the outcome so don't take this personally. more of an adademic excercise.
Looks like there was a slight bypass in the two face cuts, which created a unintentionaly bypass dutchman. That looks visible in the video for the moment where you stick your head far forward enough to view the finished notch.
The definite tell on that is when the piece starts to go, then stops, after the back cut opens up just an inch. Then you have to cut through the rest of the hinge before it releases. You can see on the falling log, that the hinge is completely cut. there are no ripped fibers.
There is no conjecture in the above statements. If you know tree work and look carefully at this video, this is 100 % a classic bypass dutchman. In many cases, as in this one, it doesn't matter. But you could end up losing a piece/tree to side weight in a different scenario.
There is definitely more of a tendency to bypass when making the bottom cut of the notch first. ALso take another look at the way you see-saw the bar on the initial bottom cut and you can see that you went a little too far on the far side for a moment. Those kerf cuts can easily fill with sawdust and become invisible. Took me losing a big oak 45 degrees to the side to learn this lesson
Looks like there was a slight bypass in the two face cuts, which created a unintentionaly bypass dutchman. That looks visible in the video for the moment where you stick your head far forward enough to view the finished notch.
The definite tell on that is when the piece starts to go, then stops, after the back cut opens up just an inch. Then you have to cut through the rest of the hinge before it releases. You can see on the falling log, that the hinge is completely cut. there are no ripped fibers.
There is no conjecture in the above statements. If you know tree work and look carefully at this video, this is 100 % a classic bypass dutchman. In many cases, as in this one, it doesn't matter. But you could end up losing a piece/tree to side weight in a different scenario.
There is definitely more of a tendency to bypass when making the bottom cut of the notch first. ALso take another look at the way you see-saw the bar on the initial bottom cut and you can see that you went a little too far on the far side for a moment. Those kerf cuts can easily fill with sawdust and become invisible. Took me losing a big oak 45 degrees to the side to learn this lesson













