7sleeper
Addicted to ArboristSite
I know my projects are not as elaborate as most being presented here, but I will still try to show some of my ideas.
I bought at a local grocery chain this splitting axe for 12€ ~ 16$. I don't really need a splitting axe that often so I have been reluctant to buy a Fiskars for ~ 70€ ~ 90$.
What suprised me was the rather unexpected quality it presented. Hickory wood, not glued but nailed etc. Still far from Fiskars but still quite nice for 15$!
I took it with me to my FIL to split some walnut rounds I cut up last year. I didn't take my Hult Bruks with me. That was a mistake! What a disappointment! It was so blunt at the cutting edge that it would just bounce off. Luckily my FIL had a small disc grinder so I ground it down enough that it would at least work. I don't have a picture of before but I drew the lines so that you at least get the idea.
It worked more or less (more less actually) but I was in a hurry so I had to live with it. Man was I sore the next day! At home I have one of the small Fiskars so I new the secret of their success. It lies in the sleek cutting edge. Hello angle grinder and the sparks went flying.
One side finished.
The other side finished.
It finally cuts now. It has enough momentum to penetrate the wood and begin in the wood it's splitting job.
Don't be afraid to remodel tools if their design is flawed.
7
I bought at a local grocery chain this splitting axe for 12€ ~ 16$. I don't really need a splitting axe that often so I have been reluctant to buy a Fiskars for ~ 70€ ~ 90$.
What suprised me was the rather unexpected quality it presented. Hickory wood, not glued but nailed etc. Still far from Fiskars but still quite nice for 15$!
I took it with me to my FIL to split some walnut rounds I cut up last year. I didn't take my Hult Bruks with me. That was a mistake! What a disappointment! It was so blunt at the cutting edge that it would just bounce off. Luckily my FIL had a small disc grinder so I ground it down enough that it would at least work. I don't have a picture of before but I drew the lines so that you at least get the idea.
It worked more or less (more less actually) but I was in a hurry so I had to live with it. Man was I sore the next day! At home I have one of the small Fiskars so I new the secret of their success. It lies in the sleek cutting edge. Hello angle grinder and the sparks went flying.
One side finished.
The other side finished.
It finally cuts now. It has enough momentum to penetrate the wood and begin in the wood it's splitting job.
Don't be afraid to remodel tools if their design is flawed.
7