I was surprised when I did a search that not homemade units come up. I'll post some pictures of one I made if anyone is interested.
I was surprised when I did a search that not homemade units come up. I'll post some pictures of one I made if anyone is interested.
I'm interested!
Bruce
Epilog TT 35W, 2 LMI SE225CV's
CorelDraw 4 through 11
CarveWright
paper and pencils
I'll start off with a picture of my finished product. I'll try to answer any questions about my build.
Not a lot of sawyers here I guess....
Kevin,
I always thought of having my own "little" saw mill years ago but the prices shut me down. I'm in to all things DIY!
I have 14 acres of woods ranging from walnut, ash, elm, hackberry to conifers-mostly cedar. The farm I live on was
built back in 1887 and there are quite a few trees dying out. We've been keeping the house warm through the winters
here for 11 years with the die offs.
Seeing your home made outfit intrigued me.
Bruce
Epilog TT 35W, 2 LMI SE225CV's
CorelDraw 4 through 11
CarveWright
paper and pencils
The hardest part is finding two band wheels. I you find something to use for that you got it made...
Kevin,
Looks like a nice mill. What is the max diameter of log can you cut? What HP engine did you use? Did you build the trailer specifically for the mill? Since it is on a trailer what is your method for getting logs onto the mill?
We didnt build our own mill, purchased a manual mill, but have watched many mill builds and a lot of guys are using trailer tires on rims for their wheels. Id enjoy building a dedicated large capacity mill one day like Matt Cremona built on Youtube but it'd have to be stationary (for me) and electric motor. Likely wont happen.
Been sawing quite a bit over the last 20 years but dont quite consider myself a sawyer though I try to cut only primo material on the mill. Your little jib crane would be handy for sure. As mentioned in the other reply, not a home made mill but we always pull the wheels and setup close to the ground. Not as great on the back for off bearing but makes loading and turning easier. Were finishing up a batch of logs off my own place now (way too many logs lol) and seeing some of the things on your setup makes me want to bring the mill here to the shop and make some modifications before we move it to another piece of property for another ridiculously "too many logs" job lol.
I built my mill, been using it about four years and have made a few improvements. It has a 23 hp Briggs & Stratton, 205R14 tires for band wheels and will cut 40" wide OR 16 ft long. Began as totally manual but now has power up/down, power feed and setworks, still manual loading & turning. I have learned that sawing the big logs is LOTs of work and prefer 20" - 24" diameter.
_______________________________________
When failure is not an option
Mediocre is assured.
From posts I've read over the years high overall cost and lack of success make it less common then you'd think. There's some on YouTube a friend of mine made one using trailer tires .Had about $1500in it by the time he abandoned it because it wouldn't cut straight .
I have power lift and carriage movement.
Sawing the cant.jpg
I made a mill a few years ago, works well.
Normally I have a 2 HP 3 phase electric motor that I run as a 3 HP.
In the photo attached it has the gas engine on it...........Rod.
I am a better woodworker than metalworker, so I bought a used Cooks MP32 about 12 years ago. Have not bought any hardwood since getting the mill. If you need wheels or mill parts, Cooks sells them.