Well what got the wood to your splitter??? What cut the logs into blocks????? Did you just leave the wood laying on the ground after you split it, or did you eventually have to pick up thousands of split pieces off the ground and get them to where you burn them???? Any way you do it, that wood has to be handled. Why lift it up and drop to the ground and lift it up again. I build machines to do the work for me work for me without busting my arz. The pieces you were splitting in your pic appeared to be limb wood. You don't just reach over with your arm and pull a 50-100# block onto your vertical splitter either, and then you have to wrestle it several times to break it down to usable firewood. I prefer to strand straight up where my back doesn't hurt when operating my splitter, and let my equipment do all the lifting Loren
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Today's Featured Article - Product Review: Black Tire Paint - by Staff. I have been fortunate in that two of my tractors have had rear tires that were in great shape when I bought the tractor. My model "H" even had the old style fronts with plenty of tread. My "L" fronts were mismatched Sears Guardsman snow tires, which I promptly tossed. Well, although these tires were in good shape as far as tread was concerned, they looked real sad. All were flat, but new tubes fixed that. In addition to years and years of scuffing and fading, they had paint splattered on
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