Good video, keep ‘em coming and the music is nice accompaniment, and it takes the kind of wood you’re cutting to build those string instruments as well
Interesting test my friend!! Been on the track cutter lately but going to start putting the two new Holzforma Husky clones through the paces tomorrow morning!!
Great video. Honestly wish I could come up and help you, cause felling like this is a kind of s dream job for me. More so since I get this 066 BB pop-up piston recently 👍
Awesome video ODIE -WAN! I do like that cat with the swing grapple. Those are really Handy. Would love to try one out sometime. Some really nice big logs getting loaded out as well. How much board footage can they haul? Be good brother 👍
Man it is impressive how dirty that saw is and it’s only 2 weeks old. I guess that happens when you use tools to make money and is dry and dusty where you’re cutting.
So you already know what time it is by now. Do you run straight outta the box stock saws normally, are or they tweaked somewhat from the get go.. Either by yourself or others, are gradually do changes as time progresses until you've got them where you feel they're at peak performance to your liking? That brings to mind another few thoughts to myself, and possibly others as well. As with anything you do get the occasional turd straight from the box, just as you get some that seems to be the best you've ever gotten your hands on. What's average lifetime for the extreme environment that y'all work in day n day out, because the average person in your profession doesn't deal with all the harsh ash n dust, are charred wood y'all do on the daily basis. Heck y'all have to chew through the bars, chains, and clutches like nobody's business I've ever seen. The exception of those folks on the fire line fighting live flames, but they wouldn't have the dust and ash as extreme as y'all do I wouldn't think. Maybe the standing kindling they have to drop while it's still blazing would be severe as it would probably be cooking the bars due to the bars n chains themselves literally transferring heat at a greater rate back to the power heads themselves. Not too mention cooking the roller tips in grease and bar oil, as well as the chains themselves. But that's not as abrasive as what y'all deal with daily with the dust and ash has to be on the above mentioned components. That said, that has to be another factor in shorting the lifespan of the power heads just due to additional drag caused by the bar oil picking up all the fine gritty particulates into the links, and the rails of the bars causing excessive wear compared to average feller in living forest daily routine.. Which I would think means that y'all are constantly touching up the chains, unless you're just running big power and shoving through the timber instead of letting the saw do it's job, which in turn shortens the lifespan of everything on a whole. Now for Chinesem saw, is it mainly just substandard materials on the average that is inferior, or is there a large degree of inferior assembly and poor QC involved in the quality of the products in your opinion. Are combination of it all rolled into making them into a turd sandwich without a glass of water to help wash them down? Yeah I know, but lotta information involved in this set of questions.. So probably going to require more on your end than usual, but just just things I've wondered about especially since you broke out the clone saw, and using it as your daily beast