Daniel
Carpal tunnel level member
- Location
- Suburban Philadelphia (Wayne)
more than you... for sure... but that's not saying much...@Daniel casually repliesView attachment 96857
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more than you... for sure... but that's not saying much...@Daniel casually repliesView attachment 96857
True enough, and yet, you still felt like it was worth saying.more than you... for sure... but that's not saying much...
Which are you?
There are two kinds of people in this world bud:Which are you?
Next time on "As the World Turns"...And the song remains the same.....
Good explanation of the face plunge. For my application I only use it when I can't meet the cut on something stupidly large. If I was felling for timber value then I would certainly utilize it more.A full length hinge undoubtedly provides more control to a stem. I still can't quite understand why you choose 2 thick posts instead of 1 long (tapered if need be) hinge. I understand the outside 2 corners are really all that is needed for directional control, but why take the risk of removing the center, especially on urban trees where defects are plenty. It seems like a bit of chainsaw showmanship and wasted moves in that setting. In the woods where every inch of that veneer log counts and to get it on the ground without tearing, splitting etc the extra work pays. In someone's yard you are adding an additional what if. And I don't like it. You do you man, but I hope people aren't paying to much attention to your vids cos this is one that takes some serious technical knowledge. I think someone/something could get messed up.
I learned how to gut a hinge in 2013. So I've only been using it for 11 years on the regular. I have never used it in an urban setting. I still do tree work to stay current and sharp, but it's not my every day.
Be safe. This video was taken yesterday while cutting on a logging job.
P.s
Why you would take a running start on a pull tree with a front end loader sounds insane. Especially with the tree cut up amd standing on posts. I guess I'm playing a diff game then you Daniel.
Be safe
That math is way over my head.. thanks for taking a crack at it... the only thing I would ask is that whatever area you are measuring to be removed from the center of the hinge, you add to the corner posts.. I get the impression that you do that, but not sure of it. Can you just report the findings in lay terms so I can understand it please... ThanksWell, curiosity and boredom got the better of me. I did the 1/3 10% configuration. Notch depth leaving hinge length of 80% DBH gets uncertain because of trunk taper/root flare - seems like it would leave the smaller weaker hinge of a 25% depth - haven't verified the numbers yet. OSHA was the only hard reference for 10%
The chords that make the hinge were 0.940 and 0.990 diameter - pretty damn good at getting the most support while balancing over/under center and wedging leverage.
I still haven't resolved choice of axis re 2nd moment of area because if you choose it to coincide with the neutral axis there's some intuitive advantage but it complicates the math, but for realistic analysis considering the unequal compressive and tensile strengths of the wood it might be necessary. For the first try I just chose the centroid axis. (resisting side lean)
1/4 pi r^4 whole circle Ibar = 0.0491 D^4
Ibar rectangle of hinge 1/12 b^3 h = 0.00692 D^4
I contribution of triangular ends of hinge based on 1/36 b^3 h and d^2xA parallel axis theorem
0.000572694 D^4 - the 694 is the bits about their own centroids and the 572 is d^2 A contribution
- those little bits contribute another 8% strength due to the magic of r^2!
add = 0.00749 D^4
%of original 0.00749 /0.0491 = 15.2% strength
Ibar remove center 1/3 1/12 b^3 h = 0.000256 D^4
%hinge strength reduction 0.000256/0.00749 = 3.4% surprising result magic of less r^2
I'm pondering the interpretation of these numbers. 15% rings true. Anyone want to translate the axis to the edge of the trunk using the parallel axis theorem? I new axis = I old axis + cross section area x (distance between axes)^2 Curious if axis choice affects the results
Worth noting hinge strength varies directly/1st power of hinge thickness and hinge thickness goes away as the fibers fail.
Maybe not so much of a consideration. By the time hinge fibers begin to fail, the tree has enough momentum to carry it to the lay as long as they hold "long enough"...Worth noting hinge strength varies directly/1st power of hinge thickness and hinge thickness goes away as the fibers fail.
Obviously we are taking complete guesses at the numbers on gain of strength, and amount of loss during ° of motion, but I would bet good money your estimate of 10% gain is well under estimated. And the factor I promote as most important is hinge thickness. Hinge thickness is going to make a huge difference amount of strength gained. In other words, you're going to get a lot more gain from leaving 20+% on the tension side than you will by simply taking a little out of the middle and addiding it to the corners on a thin hinge.If you gain say 10% by fattening the hinge then immediately lose it in 5 degrees of motion the gain or compensation seems questionable. The problem needs another page of head scratching to quantify that dilemma.
.99 and .94 surprised me too. yes 33% + 10%xdia = 0.43
I think you are making a flawed assumption that adding 10% more hinge material will only add 10% to the hinge strength... Take the example of a 20" DBH tree, standard notch and back cut leaves a 10% hinge. Hinge is 2" wide... set the pull rope at 50' height (arbitrary) and pull it over with 3 guys on the rope.... Now make that hinge 4" wide, and put 6 guys on the same rope... NO CHANCE.. if it takes three guys to pull a 2" hinge it might take 10 or 15 to pull a 4" hinge.... Double the size of the hinge is going to take 5-8x the pulling force to trip... again just a guess based on personal experience..."say 10%" means 10% fatter hinge directly as stated above. first power of the dimension. to gain 300% you need 300% hinge fatness. I recall 10's of % fatter in your vids
center 1/3 removed small 3.4% reduction because acting at r^2 from the presumed center neutral axis/centroid
the strain (stretching) per degree of trunk tilt is also 1st power of hinge fatness as the fat dimension is the lever length that converts tilt motion to fiber stretch - fatter it overstretches (fails) earlier in the fall
Bad news in drawing a side loaded trunk the addition/conversion of normal stress and shear has really ugly math not the simple superposition/addition Terry Hale drew in his straight but yet side loaded tree trunkIt's been 40 years since I was almost taught the ugly math so some patience or help is in order.
Beating a dead horse here, or reminding...Flaw in the thick hinge theory?
More wood in compression means it cannot be compressed and it will act as a fulcrum to break the rear/tension wood sooner. Theoretically…