Bought a mill.

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Raithi

Member
Jan 20, 2018
49
SE Ohio
Oh happy day, the long hours of using that damned alaskan mill are over. Picked up an old turner pony 56" circle mill for a grand. Thing is crazy heavy and still in pieces out back. Just waiting for it to dry so I can pour the footers and lay the track. Excited to get that monster up and running.
 
Pictures when she's up and running, please.
 
Pictures when she's up and running, please.

Will do. Heres a blowout diagram in the book that came with it. Has a 3rd headblock added, came with a box of teeth, tool to remove them, and a sweat.
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Assembly pictures would be great too! What are you powering it with?
 
Assembly pictures would be great too! What are you powering it with?

For the time being Ill be using my old wd45 on a belt. In the long term I have an old ls1 vette motor Id like to rejet the carb and build an imbert downdraft wood gasifier to run it. Then I could power the mill, and prob a 50kw genhead on mill ends and tops... wood power to cut more wood :p
 
FYI in your planning add in a chipper. Wood gas engines need uniform dried wood chunks to put out steady flow. Its a detail that most you tube videos leave out. Green chips don't work very well as there is lot of water vapor carry over into engine. Sawdust also doesnt work well. The gas from green wood also tends to be acidic and hard on the engine.
 
Can't wait to see pics of this. Any specific projects in mind for it? You planning on building an outbuilding from lumber you create yourself?
 
A friend had a mill powered by a 300 cu/in ford with a 4 speed transmission. I think it was direct drive to the blade arbor. that was 30+ years ago so I really don't remember how he ended up running the final drive. He later up graded to electric.
 
FYI in your planning add in a chipper. Wood gas engines need uniform dried wood chunks to put out steady flow. Its a detail that most you tube videos leave out. Green chips don't work very well as there is lot of water vapor carry over into engine. Sawdust also doesnt work well. The gas from green wood also tends to be acidic and hard on the engine.

Ive done some experimentation on with a small one on an ohv briggs. Instead of a chipper I was thinking something more akin to a slicer? Think of a small cement mixer cut at a spiral and sharpened up against a bar, then I can sorta cube it in 1" blocks.
 
Forgot to mention, as far as saw dust... its a gold mine, pet and feed stores, stables, and local farmers always want sawdust and shavings.
 
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Forgot to mention, as far as saw dust... its a gold mine, pet and feed stores, stables, and local farmers always want sawdust and shavings.
Pellet mill???