I dont mean to be offtopic but does anybody know of a way to get back into an Instagram account? I was dumb lost my login password. I love any help you can offer me.
@Yael Wallace I really appreciate your reply. I found the site thru google and I'm in the hacking process now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
Good morning Adam. The splitter is pretty impressive. Great demo of how well it can handle the big, heavy, hard, stringy stuff. Thanks for sharing! Cheers!
Good job Adam, that was a big Hickory tree !! Lots of good firewood out of it for sure. The Easton Splitter did a super job splitting up the tree. Thanks for sharing with us.
Hey Fred, thanks for watching. Yes according to the firewood BTU charts hickory is the 2nd best east coast hardwood. First is Osage orange but we don’t have much of that around here
That box wedge is incredible! Going through large knotty hickory log like nothing! First time I see this model of splitter! I should have built that! New subscriber here! And ready for more splitting action this spring! Thanks for sharing Adam!
I am glad to see he finally put a log return feature on the splitter that is a real back saver..... woodmizer hasa splitter that will split in both directions, it makes two pile either side of the operator and splits twice as fast because of that, but the log return on your splitter makes the Easton splitter double quick as normal. definitely saved this in my firewood playlist lol
Not many yet. I dug out some stumps when I got it but down here a little further south than you has been a terrible winter. Some snow and frozen ground then a warm up and rain, rinse and repeat. Nothing but a mud pit winter. Wife has been mad wanting me to get more gravel for the drive way which of course would just disappear into to mud, not throwing away my money on that. Debating whether or not a filter fabric would help keep it from disappearing. Maybe in the spring might be digging up my foundation to rewaterproof it so that will be a good task.
jason cline winter has been just about the same here. We’ve probably gotten a little more snow and colder temperatures but today is gonna be 50 degrees and just outright greasy out
That 12-22 is a beast. I sure wish I had the wood out that tree. Box wedge makes lots scrap but sure does make it easy for them huge rounds. Nice video 👍🏻👍🏻
Came over from Tractor Tech's channel since Roger mentioned you will be in the log splitting demonstration on 18 April 2020. Came over to show support. New Subscriber!! That's one monster of a machine. Full-watch.
I should be getting a bundler in a few weeks. I have a local welding school that volunteered to make it for me as a class project. Can’t wait to get it
you should buy a sawmill if you got wood like that around lol, I used to split huge logs with a single wedge splitter, now I saw them on my woodmizer and just split limb wood in half one time...it is so much easier and more profitable .I burn firewood in my maple syrup evaporator, and I burn coal in my house, but with a reverse Osmosis I really dont need that much firewood....but if I had to buy a bigger splitter I have had my eye on the easton made, I talked to the owner at the Paul Bunyan show... his dad is the owner of Bell's Machining that makes the big firewood processors. He knows how to build a splitter for sure and I LOVE the color scheme. I'm not nitpicking but now that I have a woodmizer I just cringe everytime I see big gorgeous logs being cut and split knowing the potential beautiful lumber that log may have had inside, its really hard to watch...even if it has knots and twists that can make really charactered panels or something
@@HometownAcres 372 used that's pre xtorq and have it ported by a good builder. Itll scream. I cut firewood with a ported 288xp and a ported ms441c arctic. Great for 20 to 24 inch bars.
From years of splitting firewood for my home heating supply, I found that Hickory and English Elm were to two hardest trees to cut and split. You could see the strain on the Eastonmade Splitter.
That splitter is a beast because I know what it’s dealing with when your putting that hickory they it!! I just can imagine what the 22-28 is capable of..
One of the most impressive things is the machines ability to load these very heavy rounds up on the splitter and to move them back and forth with the box splitter without jamming up.
Yes it really does all of the hard work for you. I couldn’t imagine swinging a maul in these large hickory rounds. It would have just bounced right out
That stringy hickory is tough ! But the Eaton powered through. I have a hickory blowdown at my cabin, haven’t got to it yet .anxious to see how the wolf ridge does. Good video Adam thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing. 👍 for wearing PPE so many people dont. Without wanting to be that guy that tells you what to do... Just watch your left hand while chainsawing try to keep your thumb under the handle it will really help you grip the saw if you get kickback. Good job and keep the videos coming i love them
Nice video. Yes, hickory is excellent firewood, a lot BTUs. The Eastonmade splitter does an great job. You need to use a 72-90cc saw for those big loads. I would recommend the Husqvarna 572 with a 28” bar.
I just finished a log splitting project on a 90 foot shagbark hickory in my backyard. I was splitting for 4 days and only got through about 90 logs or so. I wish I had this eastman splitter with the lifting mechanism and splitting wedge (it would have saved my back and possibly prevented a pinch nerve!). I had a 20-ton barreto splitter and let me tell you it struggled on many pieces. Also, there were sections of wood that just wouldn't split...it would roll up like string cheese. Anyway it seems like you made good progress on this beast of a tree.
Wow, the more I watch that splitter in operation the more I wished they were around thirty and forty years ago, would have saved a me a lot of swings with a splitting maul. Next, you need to challenge that machine with some knotty, nasty hedge.
I really like the box wedges. Eastonmade has the best design. Other seem to struggle to push wood through it, or make a big mess. The eastonmade handled that big hickory like it was nothing.
Hometown Acres Yep, sure am....2017 Off-Road, long bed, magnetic gray. Just wish the steering wheel would telescope and tilt more....course the old 4.7 V8 I had in my 4Runner would have been nice in the Tacoma 🤔😏
I don't know about anyone else but I save the scrap pieces from log splitter as a great way to get a fire going. You could bag that material up to sell it.
Great work! Hickory is a pain to split. I hate it. Even on a splitter I have to work the sides before entering the middle on knotty stuff. The shorter the length the better off you are. Besides that's a fantastic smoking/cooking wood, it's better in smaller chunks. I prefer ash for fire wood because its everywhere in the midwest. When I see hickory like that in good condition I always think how beautiful the wood is, and a mill would produce such beautiful boards. But this has a purpose keeping your family warm so it definitely was used for something good. God bless and stay safe!
Shagbark Hickory is some of the toughest splitting wood you can find. Especially when it is knotty. That 12-22 didn't have any problems with it at all. When you lifted the first round up the splitter barley moved. The quality of a Eastonmade splitter is just the best in the industry hands down.
@@HometownAcres Thanks for posting the 1st video my box wedge and arm setup will be arriving shortly for my 12-22. I feel it is the best commercial splitter money can buy in my opinion i am 100% satisfied .The customer service is second to none and is as good as the splitter . Andrew truly wants a happy customer and is a wonderful guy to deal with !!!
Yeah I’m between the 372, 572 and I am considering switching to the dark side and looking at a Stihl 462 just because it is a pound and a half lighter but still a 70cc saw
That would definitely be good for smoking wood! I use hickory for ribs and Boston Butts. You definitely need a bigger saw! Husqvarna 592 is coming out! I use a 562 xp and it is really good! Love the videos.
certainely way faster and easier than any firewood splitting I've ever had to do, how much did that unit cost? I know they get pricey especially if you want the conveyor with it
Great video (again). Question: Can you show the waste that is generated from the box wedge? I've heard there is quite a bit of waste from these. I do my splitting by hand but like to watch these machines at work. WIth that waste, what do you do with it?
Eastonmade doesn't make a 8 way for the 12-22. You have to jump up to a 22-28 to get a 8 way. The 8 way wedge is wider so it won't fit the 12-22. Biggest you can go is the 6 way with the 12-22. They are fast but lack the power of the 5" ram.
good to see the box wedge demo as i am considering buying a splitter and do a lot of oak and maple just broke 85 full cord last week for this winter and split everything by hand.
@@HometownAcres in all fairness there is the smaller wood that does not have to be split. i like how i have been told there is no way i could do that much by hand and my reply is how much money are you willing to lose betting on it. i turn 55 in may so i am considering slowing down.
@@waynejohnson9855 well you know what work is. I've selling wood for 12 years an me and my 2 man crew do about 300 ish cord a year by hand as well the funny thing is I cant find a kid that can keep up this old man
@@wileyseifert5769 i hear that about keeping up, i can retire in 2 years and than that will free up more time for firewood, as i work from april til thanksgiving and get cutting around the second week of december. looking to get certified and get into bundles as we had a tornado nearby and the amount of basswood and aspen that was damaged was unreal. and that is why i would go to a splitter like this one with the box wedge.
You need a Husqvarna 955. I have one and it goes through logs like that no problems. You can get a 20 and 24 in bar with it. It’s run around $800 to $900 but is well worth it especially if you cut a lot. Just thought I would send that out to you. Hope this helps you out. Have a good day!!
The 455 is more than capable of handling that kind of wood, I used a 49cc Poulan to cut even larger rounds for years. The trick is to let the chain cut at its own pace and not force it, keeping the chain speed up is more important than forcing it to take a big bite. When I upgraded, I went with a 460 to be able to pull a 24 in chain through the thickest stuff and find that I am still going back to my 49cc to process the vast majority of my wood. I have not had gas or central heat for the past 19 years and have used wood exclusively since. I would kill to have a splitter like yours, I have heated our house with wood using only a saw and splitting axes and wedges.
Wow, stories like yours impress the hell out of me. I see how much work it is even with the equipment I have, tractor, side by side, saw, splitter. I can’t imaging gather an entire winters worth of wood by hand. Absolutely incredible
@@HometownAcres The advantage is it keeps me from getting fat, I have teenaged sons now that pitch in but we can split wood faster by hand than using a small splitter. We burn mostly oak and Hickory with elm on occasion but only when its dried well, Oak and Hickory bust easier when they are green, whereas Elm and real knotty woods have to be dried, or use a hydraulic splitter. On average we burn between 4 to 7 cords depending on the winter feeding one large woodstove in the center of the house and a small bix stove that has been custom modified to be airtight and have a secondary burn chamber. We use a small space heater to level out the temp fluctuations but it only turns on for maybe a half hour a day.
Hi ya Adam, I think I asked in another video about the Eastonmade. Im about to buy either a 12-22 or a 22-28 and there's a pretty big price difference. I have tree service wood as my primary source but so far what they have dropped off hasn't been knotty at all but just big (anywhere from 20-30") and wondering if the 22-28 is worth the 4'ish k difference.
the shagbark is my favorite for just about all kinds of bar b Que and meat smoking as well as heating in winter. and amazingly hard wood with very high BTU rating
@@HometownAcres Yeah, give it a little thought. I'd be interested in knowing what you have learned. I stack mine in single file between two trees and lay a strip of plastic over the top. I'm not gonna build any shacks. Is this the right way? Hell, I don't know! I'm a weekend warrior, not a lumberjack. I see your stacks are uncovered. Does this extend seasoning time?
If you can appreciate what a quality tool like the eastonmade can do, you owe it to yourself to get a professional grade chainsaw. A 70cc class saw will do anything you want it to, cut circles around your 455 and last way longer. If you’re partial to husky, 372xp or 572xp, stihl, 461/462, you won’t go wrong and wonder why you didn’t get one sooner!
I could get a 372 for about $799 from my local store. But I do really like the Stihl 462 as well even though I am partial to husqvarna. I think the 462 is like $1,200 or something though
Hometown Acres I really liked the 462 as well, however I have ran 372’s and other husqvarna’s for so long I have accumulated parts and lots of bar/chains. I recently bought a 572 and am very happy with it. If you have a dealer in the area that’s better for one brand or the other definitely factor that in. The 572 and 462 both have electronic carburetor control that kinda require more dealer support.
Craigslist man!!! I picked up a ms660 magnum from a guy in Missouri who didn’t know what he had for $350. Took it to the shop and replaced the intake line and starter paws and starter rope...she’s treated me awesomely ever since. Even put a 32” bar with ripping chain and milled some cedar and built a crib for my new daughter with it.
Would that wood push through easier/cleaner if the log went with the grain of the timber through the splitter. We were taught to plane our wood work projects with the grain it cuts smoother. I know its only firewood just wondering the result.
Good work Adam. I would love to see how that splitter would handle the hard narly Aussie gums like grey box or ironbark. Mate I'll do a deal with you, I'll swap my MS462 for that splitter.
You didn’t finish the job I saw a lot of wood still on the ground lol. That splitter is a firewood making machine mowing through that hickory. I can attest to the hickory being tough as I worked through the rest of mine yesterday 24”-30” rounds. Take care brother.
If you need a bigger saw look on Craigslist.. Got a Husqvarna 371 and a 61 for cheap. Lots of good deals on there now… I love the 371, seems to cut as good as my 461 Stihl.
Good video, of that nice looking machine. Well to me sure it might could be, but I don't think it's hickory, sure I haven't split hickory, so it could be, but I know elm wood is similar to that as in stringie.
Should always have at least a couple saws at the cut site. I run a 455 for general cuts but have a 575 XP and an 066 for larger larger logs like that. I run all my saws with 20" bar so that all my chains are the same in my saw bag. I do have a 24" bar for the 575 XP but I very seldom ever need it.
Had a hickory come down in a hurricane. The limbs were fine but processing the trunk turned out to be more than I wanted to mess with. That hickory is some wicked stuff. Too taxing on me and the chainsaw. I'm not as young as Adam and as Dirty Harry would say, "A man has got to know his limitations". I have another dead hickory still standing. It's gonna stay that way.
Haha I promise the splitter makes it a lot easier. But even picking up the pieces of firewood are heavy. Hickory is so dense and when it’s green loaded with water. I bet some of those bigger chunks of firewood still weigh 10-15 lbs a piece.
Holy crap that is a heck of a score!! I hope most of that is going in your “keep for personal use pile”...lol. Also how was it smelling? I always find splitting hickory just stinks & then it makes me wonder why anyone would wanna cook/smoke with it...hahahaha
Hickory, White Oak, Hedge Apple are the 3 best in my area. Only burn the Hedge Apple/ Bois De Arc in an enclosed stove, it is not fireplace wood, but is is as power dense as coal.
Hickory tree just saved my shed from Ida, about 8" across must have took the force of a giant oak the hickory is bent over the roof of my shed branches bent & didn't poke any holes in the roof its right on the roof. What a mess