Well I got some nice sycamores I plan on making b&b siding out of, but with a temp of 10 and a wind chill of -13... It didn't happen :) . Got the mill out and ready, went to start the jd4430 to bring up some logs, but she wanted no part of it. By that time my toes were allready cold so I just packed it all back up. It is supposed to be even colder tomorrow, I may have to wait a few days.
I can take the cold.....pretty much...... but not the cold with a strong wind. I hate being cold.
Not so much the temp as the wind chill, Also, when the machinery says, "Eh No" It's not worth it.
North country office went through a brutal couple of cold day last winter. One truck left outside sheared
an oil pump drive when trying to start it, which it did start and promptly had zero oil pressure :o
I believe it had Dino oil not synthetic.
DGDrls
Weather guesser is calling for wind chill to be zero or below for the next couple of days. I think I will keep putting wood in the stove and maybe work on my taxes a bit. That's way too cold for a boy raised this far south.
our high temp for the day was minus 7 wind chill put it down to minus 30-40 . i had to put a coat on today.normaly i wear a sweatshirt.both tractors started, skidsteer was purring,life isnt as miseable when you deal with it more regular than other parts of the county.
right now its minus 17 :)
Minus 20 here with the windchill and I just came in from replacing a battery in my diesel truck. Guess that's what I deserve for being cheap and trying to limp a weak battery through the winter.
I don't have to be outside unless I want to. About 15 is my cut off. I have a certain amount of clothes I put on. If I start to feel kinda cold,I head for the house.I know some of you have to be out in it and do it quite well.
Just go out and work hard and you will be ok, I did that the outher day and had to take off my coat, and it;s was nice at +5 with the wind :D :D :D ;D
I can stand it if it's 20° on the hot side of zero, but if the wind is howling, even 40° is questionable.
I cut wood and just play around some. Probably if I stayed cutting wood steady I would stay warm. Than I get on the tractor and do nothing,but get cold. ;D Not cutting wood for money,so no big hurry to get the wood out. I just do it to improve my land. I cut some,walk around some,drive the tractor,walk around some. I am living my dream.
We all should be living our dream, life is to short not to be happy ;)
peter
this morning its minus 26 i'm looking through all my clothes, i cant find happy pants to keep me warm ;D
It's only -24 here right now, going to be cold all week. I only start the mill at 0 or above. Steve
Looking forward to my dream of starting my mill, once the land is found. Today is only going to reach 6*, so Iiiiiiiiiiii think I'll find something to do indoors today
You work in the bitter cold if you must,if you have the option you wait for better conditions,you and your machinery take a brake. Frank C.
Quote from: bandmiller2 on January 22, 2013, 08:09:13 AM
You work in the bitter cold if you must,if you have the option you wait for better conditions,you and your machinery take a brake. Frank C.
Tell 'em Frank. smiley_thumbsup
With temperatures in this morning at -17 so what better time to catch up on some repairs indoors. The low temperature is really not the worse thing as the wind chill is around -40 degrees.
My son is in Fairbanks and while December was record cold for them with days over - 50 degrees January has been warmer than Wisconsin most of the time.
I voted for the indoor chores too.. I went out towards the afternoon thinking it looked pretty sunny out. I tied the cover down on the mill the wind had blown off.. w/ no shed & wind gust over 25.. I went back inside.
Quote from: red oaks lumber on January 22, 2013, 06:43:00 AM
peter
this morning its minus 26 i'm looking through all my clothes, i cant find happy pants to keep me warm ;D
good one :D :D :D :D :D :D
Must be what you're acclimated to. This morning it was 28f where my mill is set up; not cold at all. Nice morning, really. Took half an hour to get the hydraulics warm enough to work. I got a problem with that.
28 would make me happy for sawing. I will have to wait a while for that.
Don't mind the cold as long as I'm working enough. Used to work for a tree service that ran year round. The wind is the worst thing. My face looked sunburned some days from a good windburn. I was out today working on the set works on the LT15. It was around +20 F, with 20 MPH winds. The only thing that was cold were my hands. Had to take the gloves off to handle the bolts, and wrenches. If I were milling, it would have been much better. :)
A lot of our cedar is in tree length. I lay it out and mark with paint.
Paint can would be cold and paint not wanting to spray.
Now I get the can good and warm and put a huggie on it. Works great at 20F today. Got about 2000' marked.
Hope I don't have to try it below about 15F
How cold is to cold?
TOMORROW!
Ice storm coming. >:(
I feel like below 20 is too cold, mostly because of the wind, on calm days 20 is doable, just cold when the gloves get wet.
We don't get too cold in Charleston, rain can be a deal breaker though.
Well it was 0 this moring and I had to get the wood cut so the guy can come get it friday. thats when he wants it, all frozer red oak, not fun but im trying to make a liven, but the woodmizer ran good , so not to bad friday I have to cut some 6x6x8' out of w oak
when you work for your self you can;t tell the customer I don;t have your wood because ti's to cold, besides I told the customers when the wood will be ready. and I allways do what I say im going to do and when,
I can use all the customers I can get ;D
I'm a southern bred eskimo! I like it when gets cold. (+20 and below) The zero mark is what I consider "cold". My equipment doesn't like it to get below about +25 and things get complicated when I need to put roundbales out to the cows and I forgot to plug the tractor in the night before.
I DON'T start cold equipment if I can help it. It's just too hard on cold steel to be under force imho. Even my cars, atvs, and portable welder are preheated before starting in the cold weather. Dipstick oil heaters are lots cheaper than rod and main bearings.
I have a limit on the amount of clothing I can wear and be comfortable while I work. I don't mind wearing long underwear or insulated coveralls, but when I get enough layers to feel like the staypuff marshmellow man I stay inside for the day and catch up on Bible study or paperwork for my Boy Scout troop.
It has ben 0 to 15 here all week wind snow just misserable ! I had to mill a beam for a job I am doing ,I got it done but the ol mill sure didn't like it ! Debarker froze ,hydrolics were moody ,dulled a new band etc. But worth the small victory !
I really dont like it if its below 70, I can stand it colder if the suns out...
Ideal temp for me is between 40 & 85°
Much colder than 40, just depends on how much wind and hotter than 85 depends on the sun.
Either one gets to far out of hand and I'm done for the day.
Did some milling today for a fella down the road. Some good sized beams. Temps were in the 20's, so not too bad. When you're running a manual mill, you keep a bit warmer. :)
I am living in the wrong area because I don't like the cold. I tend not to work, unless I have to, when the temp is below O. Like the guys are saying, "The wind is the big thing!". I have the band mill and planer inside an unheated shed so the wind is less of a factor. I find that it is no use fighting the elements. It is hard on everything including the body. Of course it is a different matter if I have made a promise to a customer. I try not to make too many promises and in winter I make sure I add, "If the weather co-operates!". ;D
As to the question in the thread, I wouldn't know. Never experienced it yet. :D ;D Might be a different answer in the south. :D
It can be nice out if it's sunny and the wind is down, even at 15-20 degrees. But if it gets over 75, that,s another matter. I don't care for humidity, probably why I havn't gone to Va. to live ;D