zogger
Tree Freak
Anything 12" or less I find the Fiskars will split in half on most hard woods.
Yes, I was referring to really large rounds, not small ones.
Anything 12" or less I find the Fiskars will split in half on most hard woods.
It takes some time and thinking about it to get the different technique down, . . .The fiskars really only works well with speed, accuracy, reading the wood good, not half good, and the combo of all that plus sharp as the technique.
I always have to find the easiest way that works for me, . . . . a lot of times I try different stuff and stop and think about it.
Just tried it on the biggest round. Went through it. Starting to love it already lol. The other rounds are some tough stuff. If I have to use wedges for each piece I'm going to throw it back into the woods.
There's going to be some wood thatjust doesn't split; elm, etc. Cut it short enough to stick in the fireplace whole.
So you're sayin' that the Fiskars is the thinking man's maul?
Philbert
Got to have an axe plan as well as a saw plan. You can't just have "one axe fix all". I have a heavy bastard for the big and gnarly stuff, and then a 3 or 4pound (can't remember right now it's in the back of the car and it's dark and raining) Hultafors for fair splitting conditions. Got a short chopping axe for kindling etc. I think I've got 7 or 8 axes around. None of then are bad. Just better suited for various jobs. A one axe plan would be a hydraulic splitter! Pick the right tool for the job and get it done.
Just my humble opinion.
Motorsen
Been saying that over and over again now for years. It just is not, ain't an 8lb maul. Swing it like that with a maul mindset (muscle memory from repetition in the past) and technique, you aren't going to get any sort of good results with it. It takes some time and thinking about it to get the different technique down, muscle memory doesn't happen with a few test swings. And learning it wrong, doing it wrong over an extended session or sessions, will give you muscle memory that is wrong, and it still won't work right. No amount of muscle is going to compensate and give adequate results.
I do the fiskars like the guy in the vid, but also drop my knees just a little, dropping my body in other words, just a hair before impact, that gives even more additional speed.
The fiskars really only works well with speed, accuracy, reading the wood good, not half good, and the combo of all that plus sharp as the technique. It's also a big plus to start at the outside and work in, right away exactly opposite from how most guys approach a big round with a heavy maul, they want to smack it down the center.
Why throw it away? Bust it with wedge sledge then try again with Fiskars or maul. Most of my clear grain wood splits with Fiskars except the big rounds. Halve them and back to Fiskars. Sometimes the Fiskars doesn't work then I pick up the maul with left hand, 10 lb sledge with right hand, set maul in Fiskars' mark and pound away with the sledge. Purpose of holding the maul and hitting with sledge is so the round stays in place to be "caressed loveingly" with the splitting tools.
Harry K
Big fiskars they don't sell in the US and a couple young dudes whacking some mambo rounds...I think I would get tired, too....
Maybe we can get one of our European members to ship about 10 of them to us.I want one.
I'd be interested in knowing what that would cost.Maybe we can get one of our European members to ship about 10 of them to us.
I would like to be in on that.Maybe we can get one of our European members to ship about 10 of them to us.
"http://www.amazon.de/Fiskars-122150-Spalthammer-SAFE-T-X39/dp/B004ARHEY4"
82.95 EUR = 102.580 USD, plus shipping.
"http://www.fiskars.de/Garten/Produkte/Holzbearbeitung/Axte/122161-Spalthammer-X46"
These would be interesting to try. Since some of them appear more similar in appearance to 'conventional' splitting mauls, they could shine some light on the whole 'Magic Fiskars' mystique.
Philbert
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