Tried searching but not sure what to search for. Wondering thoughts from others, been lurking a long time but finally made an account. I am thinking about a bandsaw mill. I have a low budget for one, or in my wife's words no budget, but that is another discussion. Anywho, I have seen some saw out there made with rubber auto tires for the drive wheels instead of a big steel wheel is this a bad thing or something to shy away from?
If you really want to saw, I would suggest making an envelope and stashing away cash, and getting one that has support and works without too many issues, no need to upset the apple cart, times are tough for many folks, a throw together could be fun for you but back at the house might be a different story, it is at times with a pretty good working mill. jmo
Hello and Welcome to the Forestry Forum, resqd1. Your sawing future really depends upon whether you want to saw a few logs and make some hobby woodworking lumber or whether you might want to develop a sawing business. Your location, log availability, sawing/lumber market, and your personal ability are all key factors.
I appreciate the advice, truly, still I don't think my question was addressed, or it was and I didn't understand the answer. Is rubber auto tire wheels for drive wheels bad? Like Turner Mills uses, or just find one with steel wheels like sequoia or hud-son etc. I don't think I will be able to stash away enough for a woodmizer or norwood. Unless someone has one that needs a pickup truck and they want to trade but I don't that right LOL. So auto tires ok or no?
Side note I am not sure all the uses, it will start as hobby stuff for my woodworking
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130330-7D-3484.jpg)
Then maybe go other places from there
I did not offer an answer because I have never built or had any experience with a homebuilt sawmill. Be patient, someone will come along.
That looks like a nice table. :)
Turner mills are not a homebuilt unit? I am talking ones out there, I am not looking to build one. Thanks for the info though, I appreciate it.
There's no doubt that much can be sawn with these units, no doubt, keeping the wife happy might be a different story, a mix of emotions for sure, lumber can be made a many of ways, the work, and cost in another story,
Oh and thanks for the kind words on the table, it is 9x4 and cut from a ponderosa pine that burnt in the Telegraph Fire in Mariposa California.
i would think that a small manual mill would be perfect for you. you can saw enough in a weekend to keep you woodworking for a long time. i wouldn't shy away from a rubber tired mill i've heard they work just fine. i've heard good things about several small manufacturers on here, better yet would be to find a member near you that has one and you can see it in person.
How would I find members near me? Thanks for the input?
By clicking on the "member map" above. It is huge, so give it time to load.
Adding your location to your profile and to the profile pin map will help others to find you. ;D
Soo cool thanks I will ad my location if I can figure it out
I have pondered tires as band wheels before. If I were building one, I would use tires with a heavy crown, like motorcycle tires. I have heard of peole using trailer tires and it removes the set from one side of the band over time. This has been overcome by cutting a groove in the tread where the teeth land, but I think I would still prefer motorcycle tires. You should be able to find a few either on CL or your local metal recycling business.
Maybe some of those little donut tires that come with smaller cars as spares... Wonder what the diameter on those is?
Quote from: hackberry jake on May 09, 2014, 11:44:13 PM
Maybe some of those little donut tires that come with smaller cars as spares... Wonder what the diameter on those is?
I'm building a mill using donut tires. You can get them in a range of sizes. My deciding factor (besides the band width) was I got one for free. Mine are 21" so I bought some 1-ΒΌ" bands. They do have quite a crown and run at 60+ psi so they are pretty hard. I don't expect the blade to crush the crown and take the set out on one side of the blade. Time will tell. I'm 90% done, just need to stop messing around with my 900 other projects and get er done! :D :D
you are only 30 min from me, you are welcome to stop by and check out what we have going on and you can see a WM in action... I dont get a whole lot of time on the forum these days but you are welcome to contact me... I have sent you a pm with contact info...
Well, dia of those "space saver" spares is the same as a normal tyre for whatever car it's off. Otherwise you would drive on a lean when you had to use it. ;)
I'd suggest that rubber types are not as good as proper metal wheels.
BUT, if you have to buy a set, and the shaft / bearings, and the engine, and all the steel... Then it's probably going to cost more than just going and buying a new mill. Woodland, EZ, even a hobby size Woodmizer.
On the other hand, if you are the DIY re-use / recycle type. Now you can pick up some used car wheels /tires/ hubs from a junk yard. A good working engine from some place. Re-use some steel. Now you can build a useful "hobby"sawmill, that actually works just fine, for only a fraction of the price.
Doesn't one the factory resaws use tires for wheels? Seems like I saw an ad for them and they had the tires on them. I think it was Red in color. A local guy made one with tires and sawed up 2 houses with it. Seems to be lots of them out there. You can buy 18" pulleys for about 45.00 each new.
Welcome to the Forestry Forum, resqd1.
Personally, I've only ever seen one mill that runs the blade on rubber tires and that was made by Simplicity. Seemed to do a fine job of sawing and that was at the Woodsmens Days in Tupper Lake, NY.
TURNER Mills is one company that does, there is just one for sale out of Oregon that I was thinking about looking into but the price seemed high compared to maybe picking up a used Woodmizer 15
You've got that beautiful 4' wide table which looks like it was cut by a slabber and you live in the land of big trees. Have you considered getting/making a slabber?
Welcome aboard Resqd 1
Does your Screen name reflect some Fire Service work??
This may help a bit with your question
https://forestryforum.com/board/index.php/topic,73194.msg1107035.html#msg1107035
Best
DGdrls
Welcome to the forum!
I wish I had the gumption to take on a diy band mill. I unfortunately am not a design artist, and completely rely on my WM to make me look like one! I am sure the ones on here that have homegrown mills are glad they did take the time to fab one up. One question I would pose, what do you intend to use the mill for 5 years down the road? I think that may help you decide if you want to go homebuilt or save up some money first for something that you know WILL work. All band manufacturers are not created equal, even though someone who has built many created it. My first mill could hardly cut air straight, the first time I saw an lt-50 run, my life long manufacturer match had been made. I am not trying to sway you any particular way, ALL of the forum sponsors make a quality mill. Just keep in mind that my first mill, was #325 of a manufacturers production output, and I always carried my whole toolbox to the mill with me. My hat is off to the FF members who have homebuilt mills that cut straight lumber!
Yes it is a play on words as I am a firefighter so the rescue portion of the name, as well as I am a Christian and have been Rescued myself.
Thanks for all the other input guys.
In regards to my table, it was done on a chainsaw mill at my buddies place. It is not a solid slab.
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130311-S3-4334.jpg)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130227-TABLE_39.JPG)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130227-TABLE_32.JPG)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130227-TABLE_26.JPG)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130226-TABLE_07.JPG)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130215-TABLE_03.JPG)
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/36477/130330-7D-3484.jpg)
Does the grain in the middle run perpendicular to the two boards towards the outside?
Yes it does
Anywho back to saw talk, I am thinking I am shying away from tires.
Quote from: resqd1 on May 09, 2014, 09:46:00 PM
Tried searching but not sure what to search for. Wondering thoughts from others, been lurking a long time but finally made an account. I am thinking about a bandsaw mill. I have a low budget for one, or in my wife's words no budget, but that is another discussion. Anywho, I have seen some saw out there made with rubber auto tires for the drive wheels instead of a big steel wheel is this a bad thing or something to shy away from?
When I lived in Alaska a neighbor had a band mill built by a local welding shop that used tires for band wheels. I never ran the mill myself, but it was used to build 3 houses, a 20 x 40 workshop, and 10+ small buildings without any issues with the tires. Unless you are planning to run it as a full time business, I would say that rubber tires are fine.
First of all, welcome to the Forestry Forum, resqd1!
So I'll just share my very limited experience. I bought a home-made "sawmill" (for $50 total!!) that used rubber trailer tires ... This is about the only picture I have of the DanG thing (sorry for poor quality).
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/31067/HomemadeMill.jpg)
The thing I would say after running a WM for a couple of years now, is that I could not get the same amount of tension in the blade running over rubber, no matter how much air pressure was in the tires. The blade would still depress into the rubber and limit the tension. I had no way to measure it, of course, but it still seems like the "professionals" are running more tension which helps to keep the cut nice and straight. The other problem I had with this unit, and likely is addressed by "real" manufacturers, is that there was enough "crown" on the tires that would either put a lot of pressure on the "thrust" bearing, or the blade would walk off the front.
So, while manufacturers may be addressing these issues, my experience with running over rubber was not necessarily positive. It at least might give you a basis for asking some very pointed questions.
Good luck!!
Thanks Sawyer, That helps
Quote from: resqd1 on May 11, 2014, 07:36:18 PM
Yes it does
Anywho back to saw talk, I am thinking I am shying away from tires.
have the boards in the center started splitting yet? are they glued?
Quote from: hackberry jake on May 11, 2014, 11:29:33 PM
Quote from: resqd1 on May 11, 2014, 07:36:18 PM
Yes it does
Anywho back to saw talk, I am thinking I am shying away from tires.
have the boards in the center started splitting yet? are they glued?
Yeah we knew it would pull a little, was the style we were going for, wanted it to look aged, so by doing it this way it pulls against eachotehr and spreads the wood in places and then you stain inside the cracks and it give character to it. This one actually split sooner that I thought due to it having to be stored in the garage for month while the dining room was being finished. It is glued and doweled. I love the character it has now. I am not a clean line straight smooth finish kind of kind, hence the live edge on the legs and long sides.