andym
Feeling the Heat
You are correct. I was not thinking too clearly in my above post. I actually meant to say stationary wedge.If you get a piece stuck on the wedge, put a piece of wood on the other side, next to wedge and run the wedge back.
You are correct. I was not thinking too clearly in my above post. I actually meant to say stationary wedge.If you get a piece stuck on the wedge, put a piece of wood on the other side, next to wedge and run the wedge back.
![[Hearth.com] Harbor Freight dual direction splitter [Hearth.com] Harbor Freight dual direction splitter](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/338/338187-207b1095d74eb8a977a589325180e709.jpg?hash=aG4FVcfRjo)
Hit us with a videoGot it put together and did a bit of splitting. Running at half throttle, it takes 7-8 seconds to travel from one side to the other.
Put it in the shop and started the first phase of modifications. Target- ergonomics. Raised it up 5-6 inches and widened it 8 inches, modified control lever so it was closer when splitting. Have to reach to use while splitting. Also added holders for axe and pickeroon.
View attachment 338160
If you are doing a 4 way wedge, consider the geometry carefully. On a one-direction splitter, the horizontal wedge is often angled slightly so the rear edge is a bit higher than the front edge. This creates some clearance, so the pieces passing under the horizontal wedge don't bind up between the wedge and the beam. You can't do that angle on a bi-directional splitter. You might be able to accomplish the same thing by beveling only one side of the horizontal wedge to make the cutting edge. (a large bevel on the top side, but flat on the bottom.)When it arrives I will try it out and see what I want to modify.
One mod I know of already is the 4 way wedge.
Huh?Hp to drive hydraulic pump = Psi x GPM / 1714 = 9.33 for an electric motor, figure on 2x that for a ICE (maybe less for a diesel).
1 hp = 746 Watts = 58 amps. Then most pump efficiency is about 85% , so, that is even higher.
8 GPM pump at 2000 psi =-30 amp 240v circuit for the 9-10 HP electric motor.
It was 9.33 x 746/120V=58A. This would not take into account power factor ect though.Huh?
9.33 HP to drive what?
1hp is not 58amps, unless maybe you are running low voltage (12?)
Single stage pump? I run a 16gpm 2 stage on 5 HP 220v motor, no problem.
Originally, that was the plan. I still might add a lift, but most of the wood I get is small enough that a lift is not necessary. I am either going to add a lift or build a splitter for my tractor.If you can build tables that are that good you can probably build a log lift, too. Are you building a log lift?
That’s what I thought. Over the years the rounds that I lifted were manageable, but over the years they seemed to get larger and heavier. Then several of my large trees were dying and I had to use equipment to lift and help split them. I finally built a lift and once finished realized I should have had one all along. The smaller rounds I put on the lift as a staging platform and I could angle the lift to feed the rounds towards the wedge.Originally, that was the plan. I still might add a lift, but most of the wood I get is small enough that a lift is not necessary. I am either going to add a lift or build a splitter for my tractor.
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