View Full Version : Hello from beautiful Carlsbad Springs
Junkpile
5th May 2016, 12:48 AM
Gidday all! Stumbled on this forum while researching chainsaw mills. I made a guide for my ms361 28" bar to slab up some 120yr old red and white pines up at the Familly cottage. Looking for good guide rail ideas and tips for sharpening blade. Great site, lotsa great info here.
Cheers lads!
crowie
5th May 2016, 08:37 AM
G'Day & Welcome to the Great Southern Land and to a top forum "Junkpile".
There are quite a few "Canuck" members plus the other North American country and the rest of the world.....
You'll find a heap of helpful & knowledgeable blokes & ladies on the forum and for most very willing to assist.
Make sure you show off your handiwork as everyone loves a photo, especially WIP [Work In Progress] photos with build notes.
Enjoy the forum.
Enjoy your woodwork.....
Cheers from On Top DownUnder, crowie
PS - My I suggest you add a new thread with your saw milling question in that sub-section, you'll gain a larger audience and thus more answers...
Nanigai
5th May 2016, 08:52 AM
Welcome to the forum Junkpile, enjoy it all, as Crowie says, "it's a top forum".
Cheers, Ian
BobL
5th May 2016, 09:25 AM
Welcome to the forums. I know your area well spending 2.5 years at La Jolla back in the late eighties. The small timber milling forum has some chainsaw millers but if you want lots of detail try this site.
Milling & Saw Mills | Arboristsite.com (http://www.arboristsite.com/community/forums/milling-saw-mills.62/)
the site is US based so will contain info relevant to your timbers and a lot more info on sharpening
I've posted there since 2007 under the same username as I use on this forum. A few years ago that site got hacked and they lost all their images. However if you stumble across a Post by me with the images missing you will most likely find the same info with images on this site.
BobL
5th May 2016, 09:58 AM
Whoops I though you wrote Carlsbad but it's Carlsbad Springs - in a different country altogether. I have been to Ottawa but did not manage to get out of the city
Christos
5th May 2016, 11:11 AM
Welcome to the forum.
Junkpile
5th May 2016, 02:51 PM
Thanks BobL I'll definitely go snoop around that site you suggested. As far as pictures go I've only had one chance to try it out so far. I had 30mins last Thursday evening so I dropped an ugly poplar in the front yard and used a short wonky board as a guide! Lol! But it did work and I'm happy. Here's a snap shot of my home grown guide and virgin 28" slicing through some petite wet poplar,
http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20160505/a0efd2e1ae725228f069b37e58e3e84e.jpg
BobL
5th May 2016, 10:56 PM
Hint - cut downslope - Its a lot easier.
http://www.woodworkforums.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=377967&d=1461929000
old1955
6th May 2016, 11:20 AM
Welcome to the forum.
Junkpile
6th May 2016, 11:48 AM
Now that lad has it all sorted! That is something to aspire to.
Junkpile
6th May 2016, 02:19 PM
After a bit of poking around... I think that might be a shot of you BobL?
Cheers[emoji482]
Rachelmiller
6th May 2016, 02:37 PM
That looks like fun. I have never seen that done before! Do you have to have a special type of saw. What chainsaw am I seeing in the photo?
Junkpile
7th May 2016, 05:43 AM
I think it's a Stihl ms880 but that's just a guess.
BobL
7th May 2016, 08:34 AM
That looks like fun. I have never seen that done before! Do you have to have a special type of saw. What chainsaw am I seeing in the photo?
It is a lot of fun and very addictive. I started out in 2007 milling small logs I picked up from the side of the road during council pick up days.
Now I have 4 chainsaw mills and have milled close to 150 logs.
It's called Alaskan Milling, because amongst the first to do this sort of thing were north american woodsmen who made simple jigs like this to cut boards from logs.
It's basically a giant peeler.
378781
The Principle remains the same in all more recent variants.
This can be done with quite small chainsaws and small bars provided they are not pushed too hard - saw needs to be detuned and let cool down between cuts.
I wouldn't recommend doing this with a really cheap saw from the web or bunnings but it does not have to be a big saw.
Here I'm using a plastic bodied Homelite 50 cc chainsaw on a rig I constructed from an old Xray machine.
The wood is a Desert Eucalypts I cut up for a Luthier mate of mine
378782
Here is a Branch from an 6 ft diameter Jarrah being slabbed down on a farm at Walpole South West WA.
The other bloke is Hud the property owner and its his mill and saw I'm using.
The Snake is a fake - we took the photo to post on a US website to show how tough the conditions are in which we have to mill timber.
It raised such a ruckus and we had such a laugh over it.
378788
Head over to the small timber milling section for more info
BobL
7th May 2016, 08:38 AM
I think it's a Stihl ms880 but that's just a guess.
That's correct.
Close up for you.
The mill is all aluminium designed and built by me and my Al boat building BIL.
And that's why I call it the BIL mill.
Yes that is a MC throttle on the CS handle.
It can mount bars up to 1.5m long.
It's one the few machines I have made that works better than I expected it to.
378789
JJF
18th May 2016, 06:56 AM
Welcome to the forum
Junkpile
8th October 2016, 04:45 AM
http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161007/ebe3f5c841791f1b9f22869d555594d6.jpghttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161007/e621a5e9e115535911c593afa0188421.jpghttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161007/ca8d60959404a9a9a96fc5506572b904.jpg
Had some fun last weekend, thinking I might build a harvest style kitchen table. The slabs are 2.5"x18.5", the beams are 5"ish x 7"ish