Amazing Fastest Wood Sawmill Machines Working - Wood Cutting Machine Modern Technology, cutting big tree easy Subscribe my channel to watch the newest videos. Subscribe now: goo.gl/8TGBfC Thanks you!
My dad was also a carpenter amongst other mechanical skills. I learned to love the small on sawdust, motors, grinders, and hand wood tools. I am 84 yrs old and greatly appreciate the look and feel of fine wood, thanks to my dad.
@pete w at the turn of the 20th century half of all people worked in farming, in the US. Nearly all of them were replaced with machines. Only 2-4% work in farming today. At the turn of the 20th century automation was already well underway. Not long before that, 90% of all people worked on farms. That means nearly every job ever to exist has been replaced by machines before. People have been wringing hands over it for hundreds of years, saying each generation of automation is the one that's going to impoverish us all. The reality is, taking human labour out of production frees people up to do other things while that production still happens. When you remove people from production, it manifests as lower prices for goods in the market and more people can afford them. We are all better off. Wealth comes from production...not labor.
Spent 2 yrs in a saw mill, lost 65 lbs in 1 winter. No heat needed, so cold I'd take off my hard hat at break and steam would roll off my bald head..thanks for the memories✌
I want what’s going on in the brain of that guy operating the machine. “Cut it! Yeah.. flip it and cut it... gonna need two cuts... yeah! Flip it. Cut it! Nice! Flip it! One cut... sweet. Next! Cut that fresh log... yeah! Let’s do this!”
I've worked in a very fast paced wood mill before too, and have almost lost a few limbs & digits because of it. I remember the time I tripped as I was turning around to put the wood strips on the table to be cut, and almost lost my hand! There was a foot pedal that you would tap to make the big ass saw shoot towards you to cut through whatever you put in front of it, and when I tripped, I stepped right on the friggin pedal, and put my hand on the table to stop myself from falling, and moved with about a half a second to spare before the saw reached my fingers. I also had a ridiculously long bandsaw, about 3-4' long, snap and almost take my ear off. It definitely keeps you on your toes, because if not, you could lose them!
RU-vid recommendations got me to watch a video that has absolutely nothing to do with my history once again. Well played RU-vid recommendations well played.
Well, if anyone else used your PC to login into their accounts, google knows about it. So their usage history may impact your recommendations. Same may happen if you used your accounts on somebody else pc or notebook. It start thinking that you may like what your friends like. This is somewhat similar to social networks behavior, - when it suggest you friends of a friends.
Very impressive machinery. That first clip, they don't pay that sawyer enough. He's has skills.That reciprocating up and down saw, in one of the other clips, concerns me a little. Looks like a catastrophic failure waiting to happen. Pow! Metal flying all over.
Worked in a sawmill in the UK back in the 90's had 1 of those . It was called frame saw and it was a very reliable and capable machine, But needed alot of attention . grease & oil etc and regular maintenance 1 of the operators used to stack 2 , 2 sided cants on top of each other and produce 112-18 boards at a time . The 2 guys really earnd their money on those days.
At 8.32 or so minute mark We called the multi bladed saw a gang saw in the old reel mill here in maine. Biggest issue would be a log that had alot of knots and would exsplode and plug those blades up shutting it down till the material was removed. Never see any metal or such come flying out but it may have bent or bowed a blade once in awhile
@@philipmyers716 yep theres 250 billion stars in the Milky Way and 3 trillion trees on Earth. That means there are 12x as many trees on Earth than stars in our Galaxy
If you had to watch background to realize its sped up then YOU ARE a dummy. Everybody who has sawed a single piece of wood would realize nothing cuts and moves that fast.
Sorry dude but sawmill work has been done like this since the early 1900's. Can you imagine how long it would take 2 people to rip cut a 20' board with a hand saw, then taking that board to be hand planed?? Not ro mention you sure wouldn't have any type of consistency in lumber dimensions. Your local lumber yard would be selling lumber marked mostly 2 x mostly 4's. Can you imagine how long it would take to build a house with that kind of output?
Smaller boards used to make slats, 1x2s, chip board (osb), ... sawdust used to make press board, fireplace logs, ...even bark is ground for mulch... No waste.
if you want to see actual modern sawmill production go check out an industrial sawmill. none of the equipment shown sped up in this video is modern in an industrial sawmill. I know this because I worked in a sawmill 20 years ago. this crap wasn't modern then! A typical sawmill will cut 1.5 million boardfeet of lumber in a single shift. band saws are used to slab each log before more band saws are used to cut it into whichever board thickness they are producing at that particular time. round saw blades are only used to cut lengths, why? because round sawblades are expensive, not only to buy but to maintain also(sharpening, tooth replacement, etc.) band saws have been used instead of round saw blades for 50 years because they just last longer. and any real sawmill de-barks the logs before any blade touches them.
I've had the pleasure of working at 2 different sawmills since 1982. First one ran until 1994. It had 1 debarker, double cut and single cut headsaws with slabber heads. Horizontal resaw and a quad band saw as secondary breakdown. Gang saw with round saws and slabber heads for the cants. Board edger had round saws and slabbers on it as well. The one I'm at now has 2 debarkers, Double cut head saw, horizontal resaw, 10 roundsaw gang and board edger with round saws on the large side. The small side has slabber heads with banks of round saws. We finally don't have to fight for logs though a large amount comes in as fire salvage.
The double cut head rig saw is 17 degrees from vertical I believe. I've seen one other mill that was canted .the same . We had a Salem band mill on our head rig where I worked as a sawfiler.
Why the heck everyone is creating a video in fast forward and think that is so cool to say "THE FASTEST SH!T" ... We can see that it is in fast forward !!
I was thinking the same, it´s annoying as fuck, they are destroying Yoututbe, Internet in general, with all this garbage. What´s equally annoying are all the morons liking this video.
You are wrong about this video being sped up. I have actually seen a sawyer this good and this fast. Also, if you look in the background you will see that the workers are moving at normal speed!
@@cliffmeadows6721 yea but you just tear shit up at that speed,I've always had an old saying and I can speak from experience, A MULE THAT SKIDS FAST DONT SKID LONG,A MULE THAT SKIDS SLOW SKIDS ALL DAY LONG.
@@elixtido1448 The chainsaw wouldn't generate such a continous high pitched sound. Secondly the hand movement of the operator and the saw dust speed indicates that it was filmed in real time.