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I’m in New Mexico and cut at 7K’ plus altitudes. I’m running a 261c and it did Ok stock. It’s ported/advanced now with muffler mod and a WCS air cleaner.I dun messed up.
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Anybody have a recommendation on a good colorado saw? I was thinking the stihl 261c.
Hot day here in westcliffe, I think I forgot to shake last year's mixed fule... that's all I can think of? Poor poor 271, it's cut a lot of wood for me. View attachment 8192830
I don't think that's how it works cutting pine in the mountains.The 261 is a good saw, the 361 is a better saw.
How does having more power not work in anything? I've never heard a person say gee whizz my saw has to much power.I don't think that's how it works cutting pine in the mountains.
When you have to carry it beyond your she-shed.How does having more power not work in anything? I've never heard a person say gee whizz my saw has to much power.
I carried a 660 all day. Then I had to use it.When you have to carry it beyond your she-shed.
Btw, you would love PRS.
Good on ya. That’s a heavy saw.I carried a 660 all day. Then I had to use it.
pro model that has a separate cylinder that can be easily replaced.
Yeah I haven't been posting much in recent years, but still check out the motivational pics thread.....grin.Damn haven't seen you in a hot minute.
I am running short this year on my wood. Had to travel for work. Should still be ok as I have a bit put by.
I'll have to look at that woodchuck jack as mine is subpar. Makes things a lot easier.
I did get a gas powered splitter this year. It is so much better on the hands and back.
Mostly lodgepole, a little larch. I just buy it by the logtruck load, and a load lasts about four winters. Stove is a Lopi 1750. So it's not huge, but not tiny either. House is 1680 sq-ft, and it does a good job keeping it warm. We'll add some space-heater action at the ends of the house when it stays below zero for a while.Damn @MontanaMarine looking good... All lodgepole or is there some fir mixed in. You must have a fairly small stove, ie small chunks. Does the wall of wood keep the carport from drifting in? Well done. I had a couple log decks scoped out on a completed timber harvest.. short logs... but it got hot and dry and when I went back to check only ponderosa pine left. Guess I better go outside and take a couple pictures of the woodpile and play.
Also details on the metal peavy. Looks like a good one!
Wow, nice firewood operation and stove (boiler?) going on there!Damn @MontanaMarine looking good... All lodgepole or is there some fir mixed in. You must have a fairly small stove, ie small chunks. Does the wall of wood keep the carport from drifting in? Well done. I had a couple log decks scoped out on a completed timber harvest.. short logs... but it got hot and dry and when I went back to check only ponderosa pine left. Guess I better go outside and take a couple pictures of the woodpile and play.
Also details on the metal peavy. Looks like a good one!
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As always, beautiful stacks and pretty country! Nicely done.Hope everybody is doing well with the firewood piles!
Just checking in to share a bit. Got mine put up for the winter. Here's a few pics from this years firewood processing.
The Woodchuck log-jack, and the lifting tongs sure make the work easier.
So the log lifter a good tool?
We just tried to not eat dirt and roll them over. Have started using shorter bars / smaller saws that take care of 95% of our needes.
Would cut down on bending I guess.
It makes the work a lot easier on the back. I have a ruptured L4/5 that had surgery some years ago, and for me the bending can aggravate the back, plus I'm 6'3", so there is a ways to bend. But yeah, the log jack is well worth the cost for me.So the log lifter a good tool?
We just tried to not eat dirt and roll them over. Have started using shorter bars / smaller saws that take care of 95% of our needes.
Would cut down on bending I guess.
“Oak wilt is a fungal disease caused by the organism Bretziella fagacearum that threatens Quercus spp. The disease is limited to the eastern half of the United States; first described in the 1940s in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. The pathogen penetrates xylem tissue, preventing water transport and causing disease symptoms. Symptoms generally consist of leaf discoloration, wilt, defoliation, and death. The disease is dispersed by insect vectors and to adjacent trees through underground root networks. However, human spread is the most consequential dispersal method. Moving firewood long distances can potentially transport diseases and invasive species.”I have a question for the pros , I have a place a hours drive away that has alot of dead oak I can cut for free , most of it dead from oak wilt, if I bring it to my home am I going to expose my oak trees to oak wilt , these trees have been dead for at least two years if that makes a difference.
Here in Florida we can't move firewood more than 50 miles from point of origin or it must be kiln dried per specs“Oak wilt is a fungal disease caused by the organism Bretziella fagacearum that threatens Quercus spp. The disease is limited to the eastern half of the United States; first described in the 1940s in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. The pathogen penetrates xylem tissue, preventing water transport and causing disease symptoms. Symptoms generally consist of leaf discoloration, wilt, defoliation, and death. The disease is dispersed by insect vectors and to adjacent trees through underground root networks. However, human spread is the most consequential dispersal method. Moving firewood long distances can potentially transport diseases and invasive species.”
If the trees have been dead 2+ years you should be fine. For extra safety knock bark off at cutting site. Ideally you cut stack on site and after a Summer of heat haul home, heat kills the fungus.I have a question for the pros , I have a place a hours drive away that has alot of dead oak I can cut for free , most of it dead from oak wilt, if I bring it to my home am I going to expose my oak trees to oak wilt , these trees have been dead for at least two years if that makes a difference.
A 291 was my first stihl saw. I cut a ton of wood with that sucker clearing my property with it. Bought it with a 20" bar and ran it that way the entire time I had it. Bought a 441 because I wanted something with more balls then I learned about modding saws.Sawed up the rest of the oak logs I had piled up. I augered the post holes for the wood shed. I used the MS291 just because I needed to make sure it ran perfectly before listing it. Good afternoon, now it’s rest time.