iDRY Vacuum Kilns

Sponsors:

First Mill

Started by Lyndaker, July 31, 2018, 11:08:53 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Lyndaker

I'm a newbie here but have read posts for years already. We are purchasing land this fall with timber. I intend to use the timber to build a dovetailed cornered house. I have built numerous scribe fit log buildings previously but never used flattened logs. I have been doing lots of research on mills as I need to cut the logs flat inside and out and have no intention of doing so with a chainsaw, way to tedious. I will also be cutting lumber for the interior of the home. I need a mill that has extendable rails to cut long lengths. Would love to get a swing blade but ..... there pretty expensive. 
Mills I am currently looking at are:
Swing blades: D and L 6x16 (can't seem to find a lot of info from other owners even here in Canada), Lucas 6x16, brand X (but probably to expensive)
Band Mills: WM LT 15, Timber King 1220, Ez board walk

Money is an issue, isn't it always. I'm sure there are lots of other basic mills out there as well. I believe in buying quality but don't need fancy. Would be probably upgrade as have money. I am very handy and a quick learner. I live in a fairly remote area in Northwestern Ontario, so parts availability and time and cross border ordering are a concern. 
I'd greatly appreciate any advice more experienced ones on this forum might have.
Thanks

Southside

Welcome to the Forum.  The one bit of advice I can give you is find a way to buy a hydraulic mill, "settle" for a used one if you need to, but you will come to understand why hydraulic log handling is critical given the project you have outlined.  I was going to get a manual mill at first but my wife talked me out of it  - probably the best equipment decision I ever made.  Your body will thank you for it.    
Franklin buncher and skidder
JD Processor
Woodmizer LT Super 70 and LT35 sawmill, KD250 kiln, BMS 250 sharpener and setter
Riehl Edger
Woodmaster 725 and 4000 planner and moulder
Enough cows to ensure there is no spare time.
White Oak Meadows

Crossroads

As southside said, hydraulics are a huge back saver. My first mill was a manual mill. When I got it my wife said "this won't be the last mill you buy". I didn't understand what she meant at the time, but she was right. After building some hydraulics for the manual mill, it was better, but the time came to upgrade to full on hyrdraulics and it's a game changer. Best wishes
With the right fulcrum and enough leverage, you can move the world!

2017 LT40 wide, BMS250 and BMT250,036 stihl, 2001 Dodge 3500 5.9 Cummins, l8000 Ford dump truck, hr16 Terex excavator, Valley je 2x24 edger, Gehl ctl65 skid steer, JD350c dozer

Chuck White

Welcome to the Forestry Forum, Lyndaker!
~Chuck~  Cooks Cat Claw sharpener and single tooth setter.  2018 Chevy Silverado and 2021 Subaru Ascent.
With basic mechanical skills and the ability to read you can maintain a Woodmizer  LT40!

Magicman

First, Welcome to the Forestry forum, Lyndaker.

My recommendation; a sawmill with hydraulics and from a manufacturer that has a presence in Canada.  Yes, I would absolutely consider "used".
Knothole Sawmill, LLC     '98 Wood-Mizer LT40SuperHydraulic   WM Million BF Club Member   WM Pro Sawyer Network

It's Weird being the Same Age as Old People

Never allow your "need" to make money to exceed your "desire" to provide quality service.....The Magicman

Lawg Dawg

I'm partial to the LT-15, and I've also done a few dovetail logs ;D

 
2018  LT 40 Wide 999cc, 2019 t595 Bobcat track loader,
John Deere 4000, 2016 F150, Husky 268, 394xp, Shindiawa 591, 2 Railroad jacks, and a comealong. Woodmaster Planer, and a Skilsaw, bunch of Phillips head screwdrivers, and a pair of pliers!

100,000 bf club member
Pro Sawyer Network

SawyerTed

In the equipment rental business they say, "Time is money and money is time."

Money will buy hydraulics - hydraulics will save time.  If you have plenty of time, then a manual mill might be the way to go.  If you can spare the money, I doubt you will regret having hydraulics.

A manual mill is a lot of physical work.  The hard physical work will reduce the production in a given amount if time.  

I'm much like some of the others, my wife knew she didn't want to be helping move heavy logs and she knew a manual mill would make me lose interest quickly. Plus we both knew a manual mill would require additional equipment for log handling. 

So we bought a hydraulic mill.
Woodmizer LT50, WM BMS 250, WM BMT 250, Kubota MX5100, IH McCormick Farmall 140, Husqvarna 372XP, Husqvarna 455 Rancher

thecfarm

Lyndaker.welcome to the forum.
How big the house?
I have a manual mill. Would not think about hyds. Money and one more thing to troubleshoot when it don't work. BUT I'm not sawing out a house either. I just build out buildings with mine. The mill has sat for a year waiting for me. I do have a tractor to help out,if needed. I try to sell the big stuff and I saw the small stuff.
Model 6020-20hp Manual Thomas bandsaw,TC40A 4wd 40 hp New Holland tractor, 450 Norse Winch, Heatmor 400 OWB,YCC 1978-79

Ianab

I wouldn't rule out a swing blade mill, for several reasons. 

Simplicity and ease of maintenance. These mills shipped into Africa / New Guinea / assorted Pacific Islands etc. Spare blade / retipping jig and a "remote service kit" with a few common wear parts, and some isolated villager in the jungle can keep them running. 

Portability. I'm assuming you wont have good roads around the property? Once the mill is broken down for transport it's pretty easy to move. As, in utility trailer behind a quad bike.

Price is going to be more than a manual band mill, but less than a hydraulic one. Production is more in line with the hydraulic band mill. Most sawing operations don't involve turning the log (although you can to produce oversize posts / beams if you want)

If you get yourself set up with a good log deck and have a tractor or similar to move logs and sawn product around, you can get through a lot of sawing with a swingblade, even one of the smaller models.  
Weekend warrior, Peterson JP test pilot, Dolmar 7900 and Stihl MS310 saws and  the usual collection of power tools :)

Lyndaker

The house will be 32 x 34
Lawg Dawg did you use a chainsaw jig to cut the dovetails.
I'm very interested in the D and L but there seems to be very little info available from them from current users, which makes me leary. Vallee in Quebec also makes a study looking band sawmill. 
I can't figure out how to reply to peoples individual posts. So just commented here.


 

 

  
Here are several pictures of our scribe fit home.

TKehl

A lot of this will depend on how big your timbers will be and how big your logs are...  
In the long run, you make your own luck – good, bad, or indifferent. Loretta Lynn


hturner12

I just ordered an Ezboardwalk jr. 6 week lead time. Stanton is super guy. There is a thread by pineywoods about adding hydraulic to a manual mill.
Hugh
Ezbordwalk Jr

dgdrls

Welcome Lyndaker,

Good advise already given,  I support the Canadian manufacturer suggestion.

I looked a while and found an 8" Lucas,  dandy mill and very portable. Its stores in my
shed without taking up all the room as well.  Easy to maintain and robust build.

D

Lyndaker

Does anyone on the forum have experience with Vallee sawmill out of Quebec? They look like a good quality mill. 

Lyndaker

Most of our logs are smaller 12-18" range as trees just don't get huge up here. How will a band mill or swing blade compare when cutting smaller logs? A "huge" log up here is 24-30" and they are rare. Does anyone have experience with aspen? There are many on the property and they have very little taper. Are they suitable for floor joist?


Here's a "huge" northern tree

Bruno of NH

I think a bandmill is suited better for small logs.
Vallee has a model that will cut 2 12' logs at once.
They look like a nice mill.
Lt 40 wide with 38hp gas and command controls , F350 4x4 dump and lot of contracting tools

shortaction

When you say Vallee are you referring to the Pascal Metals Bandsaw mills?  Little Blue, Big Red, Green Monster.

Bruno of NH

Lt 40 wide with 38hp gas and command controls , F350 4x4 dump and lot of contracting tools

Lyndaker

Yes thats the mill's I'm refering to.

shortaction

Sorry I wasn't clear, I was asking Lyndaker if that was the mill he was referring to.  If he is I have the Little Blue and have cut 4-5000bdft of spruce, pine, cedar, hard maple & burr oak.  I have nothing to compare it too as I've never cut with another mill but it works really well, easy to use scale, clamps are fast and secure, the log leveller works well on small to medium sized logs up to 12-14' length and then the logs start to get very heavy to adjust.  I can cut about 100 bdft per hour by myself when cutting decent 8' cedar using a tractor to load the logs.  I have cut some pine logs 16'8" long with up to 18" small end and had no trouble at all as long as I kept a sharp blade on the saw.  I cut a big burr oak over 30" in diameter for a friend.  We had to trim it down with a chainsaw and I had to go really slow on the wide (16") cuts and I had some waves around the knots, but it was a log that had been cut for a couple of years and my blade had gotten dull.  Don't think I was using quite enough lube either?  I really enjoy using the mill and I will soon have my other jobs out of the way and get back at.  I have about another 5000-6000 bdft of logs to get through.  

Lyndaker

Do you have track extensions? How long of logs can you cut? What is the build quality of the mill like? My one concern is the cost of the blades. $36 per blade seems pretty steep. Did you get a sharpener? or do you send them away for sharpening? Keep me posted as you think about it and have any thoughts on the mill. I'd prefer to get a mill that has a Canadian presence as parts and support are simplified.

Ianab

Quote from: Lyndaker on August 04, 2018, 07:50:18 PMMost of our logs are smaller 12-18" range as trees just don't get huge up here. How will a band mill or swing blade compare when cutting smaller logs? A "huge" log up here is 24-30"



Swing blades do work fine with smaller logs like that, especially if you can fabricate a good set up bunks, well clear of the rails if they are lo-lo like mine, and load them with a skid steer or tractor. Or a log deck and roll them in under the rail with the Lucas or ATS style rails. Getting any production with smaller logs is about getting the next log in the mill, and the blade back in the wood quick as you can. That goes for whatever mill you have, time spent loading the next logs isn't time spent  cutting.

Of course a band mill can also handle those logs just fine as well.

While the big log handling is one of the big advantages of Swingblades, they work fine with smaller logs too. It's just the log deck / dogging isn't included. But once you have a sawmill, then making bunks and a log deck becomes simple.
Weekend warrior, Peterson JP test pilot, Dolmar 7900 and Stihl MS310 saws and  the usual collection of power tools :)

shortaction

Quote from: Lyndaker on August 04, 2018, 11:07:42 PM
Do you have track extensions? How long of logs can you cut? What is the build quality of the mill like? My one concern is the cost of the blades. $36 per blade seems pretty steep. Did you get a sharpener? or do you send them away for sharpening? Keep me posted as you think about it and have any thoughts on the mill. I'd prefer to get a mill that has a Canadian presence as parts and support are simplified.
No I don't have track extensions.  My understanding is that you can't just buy sections, you buy the whole extension you want as one piece, they fabricate it by foot.  
The specs say you can cut 17' but it would require a lot of niggling around each time you flip the log.  I have cut a few at 16'8" and gives a couple of inches to spare at each end but still seem to have to slide the back or forwards to keep it centred.  I'm quite happy with the build quality, wish there was a catch of some sort at the end to keep the mill head in place.  
I average about 4-500 bdft per blade, but it really depends on how clean your logs are.  I bought 2 boxes (10/box) of blades and there are 2 blades come with the mill so got 22 blades at purchase and have just been using those.  The blades are the more expensive ones (Apex RF), my dealer said they last longer than the cheaper ones and that is what he uses.  But I have never used anything else so couldn't be sure?  I also read somewhere that the Apex RF blades where tough to get resharpened?  Again I don't know but maybe something to check on? 
My mill has the 13hp Subaru engine and it works really well, but the mills now come with a Honda engine, Subaru has gotten out of the small engine business. 
The Scale is really well laid out, would be awesome if it slid up with a set screw so you could work it off a different base height than just the bed of the mill. 
Overall I've been really happy with it.
If you happen to be coming down by the Manitoulin Island stop in and I be happy to let you try it out. 

Lyndaker

Thanks for the invite I will definitely keep that in mind. Would be great to actually try out a mill before purchasing. Not uncommon for me to drive by your area when I visit relatives in upstate NY.

Thank You Sponsors!