When I was a child like very much to see sawmill, I'm now sixty years old and never change to watch this in video youtube. I'm one of the subscribers of mark galicic as well. Cheers up💪💪👍🏻
SMOOTH sawing and what else can you do with a bushel basket full of knots. The old mill here was a Frick that'd handle 22 foot stuff, pulled by a 2-valve 4-71 and took 6 of us to run it. ALL manual. Cut house orders and beams 22 foot. Took all of us to turn the logs. No lift so we loaded them on the truck and caried them to the planer. Neuman M-48 with a 4-valve 71. YEARS ago. Now it has a 6-71 but still all manual. No planer. Grandson of the sawyer/logger runs it. Good job!
Mark sent me over and mentioned this log. The only improvement I would like to see is some more light in the area where the sawblade is working. I do realize that outside light has an effect on the lens.
@@nicholssawmillandmore I re-watched the video and the problem isn’t that you have insufficient light, it’s the fact that the background daylight outside is screwing up your F stop. Your camera/iPhone etc. is reading the background light and making your subject.(the sawblade.) dark. It’s just like if you took a picture of someone outside and the sun was behind them, they would look dark. Same problem. Mark said he felt your pain with that log I can see why.
Think about what's important to show, limbing the work didn't need more then10- 15 seconds during edit, I admit I almost clicked goodbye but stuck with it.
I am 81 years old. Sawed many logs back in the day. This guy doesn't know how to saw a log I would have went broke many that much firewood out of a big log.
Serious question, what would anyone waste their time sawing these crappy log? Better off as wood chips? Won’t the knots dry out? I could see if they were milling 8/4 or 12/4 for bar tops but those boards would only be good enough for a crappy shed for wood storage…IMO. I’d think the center might make decent beams?