I use an Ames Trutemper 8 pounder with a fiberglass handle and a 6 pound Ames with a succession of hickory handles. I use the big one and wedges to bust up the truly big rounds and then use the 6 pounder to split the smaller rounds and big splits into 3 inch splits. I really like using a chain-bungie combo to hold it together and upright. I can actually outsplit a hydraulic unit that way.
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I spent a half of a day testing with a Fiskar vs the two mauls I been using forever. Had to see for myself, I was skeptical too. I saw no benefit with the heavy mauls except for driving wedges and wearing me out. I will use them for the driving part but never again to wear me out.I'm in the process of looking for an 8 lb head. I want a wooden handle, but I've got to try an 8 lb maul at some point. I keep wondering if it would allow me to easily make that first split.
The Fiskars seems too light and narrow. Not to mention the steel used in the heads is very soft and easily deformed.
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Yeah, I know. As they say, "You can lead a horse to water".The Fiskars seems too light and narrow. Not to mention the steel used in the heads is very soft and easily deformed.
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There are others who make a lightweight splitter. It isn't just the weight being less, the point is it has the same amount of ass as the big honkers. Hard to believe, I didn't either until I bought one. If I thought the hype was BS after trying it, it woulda gone back for a refund. And, the handle is bulletproof.I wouldn't mind trying a fiskars at some point, but the quality of the steel is what keeps me from caring too much. Anyone making the "fiskars is super light so you should use it" argument probably doesn't realize that fiskars makes an 8lb maul too. (and it looks ridiculous, IMO)
I agree that the 8lb fiskars looks completely ridiculous. It is easily the ugliest looking tool I have. However, anyone who has ever borrowed it or seen me use it has been impressed. It's no heritage tool, but it splits big ugly rounds better than any other tool I've seen.I wouldn't mind trying a fiskars at some point, but the quality of the steel is what keeps me from caring too much. Anyone making the "fiskars is super light so you should use it" argument probably doesn't realize that fiskars makes an 8lb maul too. (and it looks ridiculous, IMO)
Good to hear, I've been thinking if picking it up to compliment my x27, but didn't want to drop $100 on a gamble. I really don't care what it looks like, in the middle of the bush in my safety gear I know I'm not winning any fashion prizes, I just need something that works.I agree that the 8lb fiskars looks completely ridiculous. It is easily the ugliest looking tool I have. However, anyone who has ever borrowed it or seen me use it has been impressed. It's no heritage tool, but it splits big ugly rounds better than any other tool I've seen.
I don't think you'll be disappointed. The cushioning in the head/handle put it ahead of traditional wood handled tools of similar weight, IMO. Great for pounding wedges. I love my X27, but it is even better as a compliment to the isocore. Chunk up the rounds with the isocore, fly through the smaller chunks with the X27. I took my neighbor's gransfors bruks splitting maul for a spin, and I would take the isocore over that any day. I think I'd prefer the isocore even if it wasn't a fraction of the price of the gransfors bruks (which it is).Good to hear, I've been thinking if picking it up to compliment my x27, but didn't want to drop $100 on a gamble. I really don't care what it looks like, in the middle of the bush in my safety gear I know I'm not winning any fashion prizes, I just need something that works.
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I agree that the 8lb fiskars looks completely ridiculous. It is easily the ugliest looking tool I have. However, anyone who has ever borrowed it or seen me use it has been impressed.
When faced with a large round, are you getting right into the center or do you work the edges first? Way back when, I had some that took twice around the edges before the center would split. And before that, I would go at the big ones with the wedges. Cripes I used to spend a lot of effort in those young days. Of course at a young age there is plenty of energy to spare.But as awesome as the x27 worked I have some 24" rounds here it will not touch. My generic maul won't either so I'm hoping a decent maul like the isocore will be the ticket.
Looks nice, I'd like to try it but I wouldn't buy it. I have both Stihl mauls and the professional is worth the added cost. I broke the handle eventually on their regular $80-something maul and it was replaced for free. Both have lifetime warranty handles which I couldn't believe. Glad I bought the Stihl pro instead of the Gransfors-Bruks maul I considered for nearly $250.
The x27 is nice but overrated. Good for normal splitting but I've gotten into plenty where the Stihl mauls far outdid the x27. Then again I don't mind swinging a maul, and off the top of my head I can't remember the weights of the Stihl but I don't think they are over 7lb.
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