Need advice on breaking down 42” oak round

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CTwith3

CTwith3

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Jul 24, 2015
Messages
19
Location
Westchester County
Neighbor had a 70’ white oak taken down and need to break down rounds from 28”-42” x 18”.
I have a 28 ton County line splitter, and those bigger rounds would be too big for to move around with a grapple on my Deere X738. I need to split them in place because dragging them is going to destroy my lawn- I already tore up the ground on the hill I had to drag it up.
 
67L36Driver
Joined
Nov 1, 2010
Messages
14,590
Location
St. Joseph, MO
Slab/noodle to a manageable size?
0f48e88f513732959fb976019a8dc462.jpg

ecc93bf43cc14d7d4ba2cc319e12c721.jpg

PP 655BP w/30” in the back left for size.
 
CTwith3

CTwith3

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Joined
Jul 24, 2015
Messages
19
Location
Westchester County
I have a hitch and front blade on my tractor and was thinking of tilting the blade and getting under the round to hold it up straight on whichever side needs to be raised. My splitter does horizontal and vertical.
 
Deleted member 150358
D

Deleted member 150358

Guest
Did a lot of red oak that size last year. If I had a buddy we rolled em on the splitter (dayum near blew a nut anyway!)

If no help wedge and sledge. Did noodle some 54" maple just to make fast work of it. The oak busts fairly easy but the maple was too soft and gnarly.
 
Deleted member 117362
D

Deleted member 117362

Guest
Someone try this and tell me if it only works for me? Place a few 2x6 or similar flat on the ground, makes spinning those rounds easy and you do not need to tilt round into vertical splitter.
 
Deleted member 150358
D

Deleted member 150358

Guest
Yeah guess should have mentioned the old speeco horizontal... Lay it on the ground for busting large rounds. Honda motor is a lot more forgiving of this position then the original B&S was.
 
Jhenderson

Jhenderson

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chads

chads

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Oct 8, 2011
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201
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columbus ohio
I had some big ones from the neighor. My splitter does not have a table or lift so I lifted them up with my loader and split and they fell to the ground rinse repeat.
THat was work, would of been much faster to noodle or split them into quarters or something I could handle.
Definately bring splitter to the log.
When I get stuff like that in the field we get a plank and roll them up on the trailer or wherever we are going with them.

Chad, thinking of design for a lifting table.
 
Wood Doctor
Joined
Jan 10, 2008
Messages
12,563
Location
Omaha, Nebraska
I ran into a red elm the same size as this tree. I bucked all the big rounds to 18" lengths and then noodle cut from there. Sometimes I needed halves, then quarters, and then sixths when I reached the bottom. The idea was to make lengths that I could either lift and carry away or split.

Gasoline is cheaper than paying a chiropractor to treat a strained or wrenched back. Crane and MoonDoggle know what they are doing, and as Cody said, the noodles work in a chicken coop (or in a horse stable). Two thumbs up!

Glad to see they also know how to do things in St. Joe, Missouri. Good Pics, Driver!
 

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