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Good for you sweetheart, good for you. Nuttin revolutionary here Daniel..
For the love of god, please go learn how to make a proper slice cut! If not for yourself, then do it for the children.
bull shit, Watched my pop's blow the dust off his ole saw and take care of a hung up tree with a slice cut some time around the third grade. He started workin in the woods when the men were in the second war. full of it..Maybe not today.... but 8 years ago we were just getting out of the stone age!
plunge.. Dont know about the strap. Doubt it, as this is a great way to ruin a good log. Next time try, top cut. come down the stem ~24", plunge exiting the underside.Did he plunge it and leave a top strap or just go over the top with the cut?
Its a much different game when you are getting paid for the logs.. I get paid for putting the wood on the ground... I ALMOST NEVER consider preserving the value of the logs... That goes for pretty much every tree I cut, not just the hung trees.... So it's a much different mind set. There is no such thing as "ruining a log" in my world....
I cut a perfectly good 10' cherry log in half last week, just to get it out of the backyard, because it was too heavy for the skid loader to take in 1. We put a couple guys on the back of the loader for counter-weight and when that didn't work I grabbed the saw without hesitation... Guy who picked the wood up said it was a damn shame to cut that log in half.... If he EVER put any serious $ in my pocket for the wood, then maybe I would give it a second thought...
So I if I only care about getting the tree down, I have a lot more flexibility that when I care about the log's value... If there is a technique faster, more efficient, or less likely to get a saw pinched than the the plunged vertical snap cut I have yet to see it...
The real issue comes when a tree gets so straight (after multiple cuts) that all the wood is under compression, and there is no tension wood. That is when the staggered cut comes in really handy. It still gets mighty tricky not to over-cut and bypass the cuts so far that the tree sits down on the bar. The last one I did like that with a pull line on the loader and notched it to get the but to drop away from the intended lay, which worked Ok since there was a lot of room for error in the DZ...
These guys are highway workers... they weren't raised in the woods by loggers... They just watched my video on youtube and wrote to thank me for making their jobs a whole lot faster, safer and easier. They didn't care about the log value either.. They just wanted the tree on the ground.. 100'+ oak hung up in another tree... No climbing, no crane, no bucket, no muss, no fuss.. Just a sweet little victory for the working man!
I would personally like to thank you for inventing such an mind altering, paradigm shifting, earth shattering cut. Who knew we where in the presence of such greatness?These guys are highway workers... they weren't raised in the woods by loggers... They just watched my video on youtube and wrote to thank me for making their jobs a whole lot faster, safer and easier. They didn't care about the log value either.. They just wanted the tree on the ground.. 100'+ oak hung up in another tree... No climbing, no crane, no bucket, no muss, no fuss.. Just a sweet little victory for the working man!
back to this pic Rico.. you called it "fucked up"...
I would like to have an intelligent conversation about it.. maybe someone out there could learn something that will end up saving his life or some property damage.. so beyond all the posturing and ego, can you offer some constructive criticism, instead of just throwing mud?
Me too and I think the world of your skills and experience and wouldn't bother engaging with you much if I didn't respect you.I would like to add that I enjoy and value your contributions and input around here Daniel.
I’m just a cranky, combative, smartass little fucker, who can’t resist mixing it up when I see something I disagree with. Please don’t take it personal, and my apologizes if you did.
What I am saying is that the small undercut you are making is unnecessary, and actually counter productive. It is creating space that will allow forward movement, which we don’t want in a slice cut. If you are doing that on something large or with a lot of weight above your cut, you could be staring at a barberchair in the blink of an eye. No Beuno!
Stay with me here...
First tree I did this on was a dead maple with a nice full canopy... there is a small hole that the entire top will fit in if I can get it there.... If I try laying out the entire top with a standard notch, it will either lay up into the surrounding trees or damage something on the ground. The hole is right near the tree. So I need to move the top towards that direction about 15-20 feet and then have it drop like a stone. If it lays out completely damage will be done. BUT if it doesn't lay out far enough it drops, the limbs on the back side of the tree will come down on me, which could easily kill me... The tree either has slight front lean to the hole or we put a pull line in it to make sure the tree will go our way. That's what this cut is used for... When you want the top to move before it drops, which of course could never be the case with a hung tree... top isn't going anywhere but straight down!
0% chance of BBC due to species and not enough front lean to split the trunk, and the strength of wood grain due to branch unions and the fact that by the time the tree moves there will be only the tiniest amount of hinge wood holding the top and bottom together. The width of the hinge is adjusted according to how far you want the tree to move before it drops. You need to account for some stretch in the hinge fibers which could be 10 degrees or more additionally after the face closes depending on species, thickness, live vs. dead etc...
I understood your concept and explanation of this double slice cut. I could not, and would not get away with making a cut like that with the trees I deal with. It would bite me in the ass hard.Stay with me here...
First tree I did this on was a dead maple with a nice full canopy... there is a small hole that the entire top will fit in if I can get it there.... If I try laying out the entire top with a standard notch, it will either lay up into the surrounding trees or damage something on the ground. The hole is right near the tree. So I need to move the top towards that direction about 15-20 feet and then have it drop like a stone. If it lays out completely damage will be done. BUT if it doesn't lay out far enough it drops, the limbs on the back side of the tree will come down on me, which could easily kill me... The tree either has slight front lean to the hole or we put a pull line in it to make sure the tree will go our way. That's what this cut is used for... When you want the top to move before it drops, which of course could never be the case with a hung tree... top isn't going anywhere but straight down!
0% chance of BBC due to species and not enough front lean to split the trunk, and the strength of wood grain due to branch unions and the fact that by the time the tree moves there will be only the tiniest amount of hinge wood holding the top and bottom together. The width of the hinge is adjusted according to how far you want the tree to move before it drops. You need to account for some stretch in the hinge fibers which could be 10 degrees or more additionally after the face closes depending on species, thickness, live vs. dead etc...