Milling Utility poles

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stltreedr

stltreedr

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I have hired a guy to bring his portable mill out this Saturday to mill up some used utility poles. I have about 30 of them total. He's charging $65 per hour, which I thought was reasonable. Then I came across a really nice Walnut tree on a job, and I think we're going to do a partial trade as well.

Any pointers for me this weekend? We're going to strip all the nails and stuff our starting tomorrow, and I think he's going to bring a metal detector with him.

I plan to make 6x6's to build an outbuilding... I will post pics of the process.
 
rarefish383

rarefish383

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A friend of mines cousin, has a big circle mill. He loves old phone poles. He has built several out buildings with board and batten siding milled from them. My friend says they are the coolest color, light red almost pink. one of these days i have to get over there and actually see them, Joe.
 
Mike Van

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Milling old poles sucks, I did it years ago, not anymore. Make sure you wear a good mask, doesn't matter what they're treated with, it's bad for you. Creosote, CCA [the green ones] Stands for chromated copper arsenate, don't burn the slabs or scraps, as the smoke will have cyanide in it. The newer brown ones, called 'penta' treatment, use pentachlorophenol. Follow this link
https://www3.epa.gov/airtoxics/hlthef/pentachl.html to find out all about that nasty crap. Creosote should need no introduction, most places don't sell it anymore, many illnesses come with it. My advice, get some good oak or locust & frame your barn out of that. Better living through chemistry is not always the case.
 
Mike Van

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Forgot to add all this part - If you have to use the poles, just set them whole. Once you mill them & open them up, that chemical smell will be there for a long, long time. If you close the barn it, it will last longer. Most all these poles are treated in long tanks, the chemicals go into the end grain on both ends for a way, but not always right through & through. Opening them up will sometimes reveal untreated wood that has no rot or bug resistance at all. Most are southern yellow pine, don't do well in the dirt without the treatment. I was a lineman 35 years, we used to give them away but that ended when they were deemed 'haz-mat' by the gov or d.o.t before I retired we were cutting them in 4' lengths & loading them in a dumpster. I think they went to Canada - The ground where all the sawdust from sawing them goes, don't plant anything there for a few years, as all the crap really leaches.
 
stltreedr

stltreedr

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All good advice for sure. I plan to set mine on concrete piers, and im hoping a few hours of exposure wont take too many years off of my life!!
 
twoclones

twoclones

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As Czech_Made said, hops (for making beer) grow on a vine that climbs a string to a cable trellis. In Eastern Washington, the poles for the trellis cables are often larch trees. With flats milled on 2 sides, they make good poles a "log house" style shed.

hopsField.jpg
 
stltreedr

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My first time milling!
 

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stltreedr

stltreedr

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We got 35 6x6 and probably more than 50 2x6 out of about 30 poles..

I think its enough for the barn!

Many thanks to Roger Branson at red rooster sawmill out of Bourbon Missouri
 

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