Haha yeah, we gave up on the pneumatic chainsaw and went to the drill and pop method at seabed level. Still a pain in the arse but two days vs a week. You probably couldn't pop em in shelley bay...
Type: Posts; User: No.3
Haha yeah, we gave up on the pneumatic chainsaw and went to the drill and pop method at seabed level. Still a pain in the arse but two days vs a week. You probably couldn't pop em in shelley bay...
This is the stuff, this bit is around a couple of KG...
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Me mate thinks they might be eucalyptus - I dunno about that as I thought that those gum-type trees were rot-prone. This stuff definately is not haha. It's not ironbark either, I had the fun job of...
Could well be - but I did think Jarrah was red in colour, this is more of a consistent darker brown. An uncut length of spreader is about 2m long and weighs a heap. I should weigh the thing, its a...
I've got a mate in a local lines outfit, he's been passing through some of the old aussie timber spreaders off the powerpoles as they've been replacing them - they come in chopped up and basically...
I've seen those but never tried one. Always looked like a bit of a better mouse trap - and what I'm doing now works so I never ended up tracking one down to try... A lot of chains have two teeth...
I do everything by hand with either a guided file (clamp on guide on the bar) or hand filing with the height guide that clips to the back of the file. I've given up taking the chains in to be...
Yeah, the tougher stuff that's saw cut tends to be a bit more of an issue to get going but burns longer for similar heat output. Never noticed any difference with ash residue so no real difference...