The Forestry Forum is sponsored in part by:

iDRY Vacuum Kilns


Forestry Forum
Sponsored by:


TimberKing Sawmills



Toll Free 1-800-582-0470

LogRite Tools



Norwood Industries Inc.




Your source for Portable Sawmills, Edgers, Resaws, Sharpeners, Setters, Bandsaw Blades and Sawmill Parts

EZ Boardwalk Sawmills. More Saw For Less Money!



Woodland Sawmills

Peterson Swingmills

 KASCO SharpTech WoodMaxx Blades

Turbosawmill

Sawmill Exchange

Michigan Firewood, your BRUTE FORCE Authorized Dealer

Baker Products

ECHO-Bearcat

iDRY Wood Lumber Vacuum Drying for everyon

Nyle Kiln Dry Systems

Chainsawr, The Worlds Largest Inventory of Chainsaw Parts

Smith Sawmill Service



Author Topic: Quarter sawing with Alasken  (Read 21713 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

CharlieJ

  • Guest
Quarter sawing with Alasken
« on: May 19, 2001, 04:57:43 PM »
Hi everyone,

This is my first post. I do chainsaw milling like Kevin. This morning I quarter sawed a nice oak, about 24" in diameter. A lot of work to do this
with an Alasken but the nice figure is worth it.

Offline Kevin

  • Senior Member x2
  • *****
  • Posts: 6651
  • Age: 68
  • Gender: Male
    • Share Post
Re: Quarter sawing with Alasken
« Reply #1 on: May 19, 2001, 06:21:32 PM »
Charlie;
Is quarter sawing  ripping a log into 4 pieces of equal thickness?

Offline timberbeast

  • Senior Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 360
  • Gender: Male
  • I Got nothin' to say :o)
    • Share Post
    • Timber Buyers Network Contact Page
Re: Quarter sawing with Alasken
« Reply #2 on: May 19, 2001, 06:45:12 PM »
Welcome,  Charlie!  Kevin,  quarter sawing is milling a log in such a fashion that each board has vertical endgrain.  The boards are much more stable and in most species yield a prettier figure on the face.  Picture a log in the round with the growth rings.  You saw so that each board has the rings perpendicular to the face of the board.  That's the best I can explain it.  I'm sure someone will do better!
Where the heck is my axe???

Offline Kevin

  • Senior Member x2
  • *****
  • Posts: 6651
  • Age: 68
  • Gender: Male
    • Share Post
Re: Quarter sawing with Alasken
« Reply #3 on: May 19, 2001, 08:20:02 PM »
You did good!
Thanks for that.

CharlieJ

  • Guest
Re: Quarter sawing with Alasken
« Reply #4 on: May 21, 2001, 06:01:32 AM »
To quarter saw with an Alasken you have to split the log down the center, turn it 90 degrees
and split it again. Then saw a board off  the quarters,  turn it over and do it again.
Keep turning until you get the cant to narrow to use. You will end up with boards that have to be
edged on on one side. I used Malloffs method  to split the log into quarters. Start sawing into the center then attach
end dogs and wedges. after the first cut attach end dogs to the other end and turn the log 90 degrees then saw it again. This is time consuming so it is only good for those special logs.
Quarter sawn lumber is not only beautiful but very stable.

Charlie

Offline Kevin

  • Senior Member x2
  • *****
  • Posts: 6651
  • Age: 68
  • Gender: Male
    • Share Post
Re: Quarter sawing with Alasken
« Reply #5 on: May 21, 2001, 09:45:48 AM »
Charlie;
Thanks for the details.
I wasn`t that far off, that`s gotta be worth at least $250 Canadian!

I bit into that big elm yesterday with my new Stihl and produced about 200 board feet of solid gold!
Now where to put it? :-/

The farmer asked if I was going to be using a portable mill ,  :D.


Share via delicious Share via digg Share via facebook Share via linkedin Share via pinterest Share via reddit Share via stumble Share via tumblr Share via twitter

 


Powered by EzPortal