Contact us at info@cordking.ca if you have any questions about this machine and/or pricing. You can also visit our website to view more models, accessories and machines at www.cordking.ca!
Hi Jameson :) Please get in touch with us by emailing info@cordking.ca. You can also fill out this form cordking.ca/contact-cordking/ and we will get back to you!
I hate when companies just dont say the price and make you jump through a bunch of hoops to get your contact information. Like its a trade secret or something 🤦🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️
What does that little black bump stop thing do that the log stops against when travellng on the feed chain? My bells machine does not have that. Kind of thinking i may need one...
You all probably dont give a damn but does anyone know of a method to get back into an instagram account? I was dumb forgot the password. I would love any tips you can offer me!
SeeMooreVids These are very good. For sure. But have you heard of Multitek???? I've owned 2 of these and 3 Multitek. Check out the Multitek 2040 here on UA-cam. I sold my firewood business 3 years ago. I averaged year around right about $7.6 million a year. Gross sales. Over here outside of Missoula Montana.
Not true, ask any firefighter/pumper driver operator. There are many design flaws in the production of Firetrucks, they never ask the operators what they need and where things should be placed etc... I would imagine its like that in the design of most things built by engineers. Theres always room for improvement...example, a ill placed truck mounted generator right beside the pump panel, even with a head set you have a hard time hearing the radio let alone the exhaust fumes....
I think what Doug is saying is that people can't just sit and say "that's really cool" without being critical and negative about it. It's a cool machine, design flaws or not.
These wood processing machines are just fascinating... what a concept for small logs that are nearly perfectly straight and knotless. A lot of dough for something that can't process a log much over 20" in diameter. But MAN... what it can do with these little logs is amazing!!
My brother and I built a saw somewhat similar to this in the mid eighties using a 170 cid Ford Falcon engine that we put a governor and power takeoff on. A belt drive was used to transmit power to the saw, The saw was pulled down manually and returned with a spring. We used a stripped down bull gear New Holland baler for a splitter. our cycle time was about the same as yours, perhaps a little faster We cut a 4 cord load in hour, We worked in the woods cutting full length lodgepole 40 to 60 ft down to a 4 in, top. I see maybe four cords an hour on your conveyor you're spending to much time finishing one log and starting the next. You could speed this up by making your hold down so it holds the back end of the last block and stop the diagonal cuts. IMPRESSIVE MACHINE!!!
That's pretty cool. I do see one seemingly pervasive issue, with the last end of each log. It wants to roll around as it teeters on the edge of the chain. Just in this video there were at least 2 corrections where the chain had to be backed up to realign the cut, and then an odd butt cut made to square up again. The holddown arm maybe just isn't strong enough. Don't get me wrong, I've never built one of these, just noting a few things to possibly improve on. Also where the splitter piston goes back and forth, if the timing is off I can see a block of wood falling in on top the piston. Maybe just a lid to cover that up a bit. Otherwise this is a pretty slick machine. I'm impressed.
2 mods. the support legs on the cab end.. they still push down straight. but they push down on a long arm that is pivoted on the other side. or a scissors set of arms so the cab does not rock with the movement of the saw.. perhaps a bolt on retrofit. that would be tiring all day for such and easy upgrade.. optional wider tires. so if you are pulling this into the woods or peoples yards it can float over softer areas. just curious how many conveyors can you daisy chain to move the wood closer to customers stacks..
What is largest diameter and length of log you can cut on this machine? Is the splitter head removable to run smaller pole wood? Can you run 5 or 6 pieces of pole wood at one time, like in a bundle? Is there a differant holder for a bundle of pole wood instead of the one used on the single log?
Thats the problem with all these machines! Timberwolf is the only one with a feed trough and log clamp designed for real firewood, but i dont know how they hold up speed-wise. Timberwolf has a rolling top clamp that keep constant pressure and forces the log fordward while holding tight to the last cut.
very nice machine, very quick. i'd sugest, if there isn't already one, to put a sock over the dust extractor for the saw blade.what is the duty cycle of this machine? ( how many hours a day can it operate)
Agreed. A wool bale hung beneath the sawdust exit chute. That stuff is worth money. It can be compressed into firewood, sold as is to stock farms, etc.
That is a very nice and quick machine would like to know more about it if That could be possible please let me know comment back and where I could purchase one and the price of it just so don't rock my socks thank you
I know most of the comments are old but still to everyone saying the pieces are to big, you can get different size pieces depending on how you have the machine set up. They were going for speed here so its a bigger cut.
I am just curious how your machine would handle Eucalyptus wood. For the most part, Euc is a very hard wood and the grain has a good twist to it. Like a barber sign. My 30 ton splitter had a hard time with it. And that was with a single wedge.
percy thrillington, this is lie saying,..." suddenly everyone's a car maker,.." etc. etc....... Given the choice wouldn't we rather sit inside a weather proof cab and move levers or buttons all day, than standing outside sweating, or freezing and swinging an axe? By the way, I do get your point though,..and this is how the 'wheel' get's made better, smoother, more round, and so on.
leonvandermaas You are aware this is a demonstration video, right? These machines are for sale to the industry and private businesses, so it depends on who buys one of these machines. If somebody bought one for his/her company, and if this somebody hired you to stack wood, you're stacking wood. It's their machine, their business, their rules.
you don't need to stack - pile it into a square containerized space like it was a load of potatoes or something ... this is more efficient - but ... if you want ... devise a machine that would do the stacking then ... there is the brilliance of ingenuity in the making
Kevin Olesik Or just have steel mesh cages built that hold an approximate cord or face cord. Just load it to the top straight from the processor, deliver, and drop it off... done! Some loads may be slightly more or less. Cords and face cords are approximate measurements. And weighing is no good because freshly processed wood [of the same type] weighs more than seasoned wood.
This is one awesome machine. There are some details that the video doesn't point out. Like the bump stop retracts during the cut. The pavers are near the operators cab are cut on this machine from logs, just really short moves on the conveyor. There are some really minor things that I might want different but one thing that would be a big help. Use a fly wheel that ways like 200 pounds. That way you won't get near the blade slow down you do during the cut. You may even be able to go with a lower HP engine. The chip separator might be a little longer but not a big deal. The glass of the operators cab that face the log operations, well it may not be required by any agency, but it would be a really good idea to have bars or something to protect the operator should some thing go wrong. I've seen loaders with logs stuck through the cab. Overall, awesome. Hope you guys do really well with this machine.
and just one more thin i wonder if the splitter knife can be changes to one with more knifes if you like to have smaller pieces the cab could have some lexan glass if you don't like to have bars but all in all a great machine
I really like that unit a lot but I see one flaw when you come up to the last cut the log. What’s to turn so you don’t cut it straight the log holder has a hard time holding the log on that last cut. I do like the unit that has a grapple system that holds a log and slides it forward so you can cut it. The cord king is a great unit, but it has a few hiccups that it was one of them is certainly is very fast. If you can fix the hiccups, I think you’d have a better machine. 5:26
That seems to cut the logs very short. That seems a little stumpy to the person that does not use wood lol. Is the shorter log better than a longer one?
Need one with a prentice loader attached to it that I can run out of the cab that has a power plant with wheels underneath of it that drives across the log yard.
It’s not being negative. It’s being helpful I cut lotta firewood in filling a lot of timber I’m not trying to be an ass. I am trying to be helpful things that I see I think cord king is a great unit. They’ve been doing it for a long time. It’s always better to have a few comments even if it’s a negative comment that way they can fix it and sell more products.
Even if crooked and smaller on average one man can do about one full cord 128 cubic feet per hour so I used to cut split and deliver 6 to 8 cord a day vs only 2 doing by hand Your machine is paid off after 4 years if you finance with 25% down
I've ran an older model you can not automate the machine when the nasty stuff comes through sometimes it will twist or turn sideways. It was a farely quick machine the weak point is the surround those cuts get dropped into. After while it will get beat up and expand out allowing the wood to move alot.
Checked into this machine and others a few years back. We were doing a fair amount of wood for outdoor wood boilers and bigger wood was called for. These processors excel at putting out wood for customers wanting BTU. However fireplace wood users, bulk of my customers, it definitely requires another splitting or three. However, grabbing a large piece instead of a big round and popping into the lucrative fireplace size is sped up greatly by first running through the processor. Would have to do A BUNCH of wood to see those efficiencies put more $$ in your pocket. It is fun to watch if nothing else.
One of the fastest I have seen on UA-cam for sure, I think it has a lot to do with the saw BLADE versus a chain. How much for one of these beauties? Awesome!
I see that many have asked for the price. I found a few used ones on the net for around $80,000.00, so the new ones have got to be $100,000.00 + Wondering what happens when the saw hits a nail or chunk of barbed wire.... Very impressive machine, though.
I'm sure this was just a demo. If you were really using it you would collect the saw dust and sell it. I think horse barns like to use it for bedding. Nothing goes to waste. It's just a demo man, relax.
The fast cycle time lets users process more firewood in less time! If you're interested in more info about this machine, check out our website or send us an email at info@cordking.ca!
I gave up trying to hand split a type of wood that is apparently called Cypress No idea on the spelling. My buddy broke 3 maul handles and said fuck it
Actually, you're off by about as much as they are! It's exactly 3s for the first log in this video, starting at 2:25 and beginning the tenth cut at 2:52. That's 9 full cycles completed in 27s, for 3s per full cycle. This is under continuous operation, for a log close to 20" in diameter, so it's possible that with a softer wood and smaller diameter log, the time is closer to 2.5 -- or under bad conditions, closer to 3.5.
No its not....most new stoves with secondary burn are much larger...20- 30 inch lenghts. My stove burns 24" and holds 90 lbs of wood and burns for 25 hrs.
@@jedidiah5131 Don't be a pest, Jesse. Those are huge chunks of wood, and most woods don't burn well unless you have multiple pieces in. You can get a bigger stove, but most stoves are still smaller.
@@opcn18 What channel? Oh you mean "pure living for Life"...excellent channel, another 1000 subs this month...some videos have over a million views....gotta like that.
One major problem, operator neck, having to turn it to the left all of the time. They should have set the cab, so, so it can swivel, so the operator can look straight ahead
Sure it's fast but the logs are still pretty big and would still need splitting down for many wood burners. An oak log that size is still going to want a two year seasoning process before you can burn them. My burner takes logs 10-12" long and ideally 3" diameter and that's pretty normal here in the UK.
That is the downside of production firewood, the upside is the consumer gets semi loads of firewood at a much better price than if they were to buy it from cord-a-day guys. I can fit a 16" diameter log 30" long in my stove so I wouldn't complain about any of this. One would have to buy or build a kindling wedge if one wanted business from all the old ladies (I have a few that demand madrone no larger than 3" because it's smooth and they don't get splinters and it's light enough to handle) You can't fill every niche in the market with one tool though.
Contact us at info@cordking.ca if you have any questions about this machine and/or pricing. You can also visit our website to view more models, accessories and machines at www.cordking.ca!
Cord King So what does it ballpark at? $20,00, 50,000, 80,000?
Hi Jameson :) Please get in touch with us by emailing info@cordking.ca. You can also fill out this form cordking.ca/contact-cordking/ and we will get back to you!
I hate when companies just dont say the price and make you jump through a bunch of hoops to get your contact information. Like its a trade secret or something 🤦🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️
What does that little black bump stop thing do that the log stops against when travellng on the feed chain? My bells machine does not have that. Kind of thinking i may need one...
You all probably dont give a damn but does anyone know of a method to get back into an instagram account?
I was dumb forgot the password. I would love any tips you can offer me!
This unit tops all I've seen for simplicity of construction and speed. Great job.
SeeMooreVids These are very good. For sure. But have you heard of Multitek???? I've owned 2 of these and 3 Multitek. Check out the Multitek 2040 here on UA-cam. I sold my firewood business 3 years ago. I averaged year around right about $7.6 million a year. Gross sales. Over here outside of Missoula Montana.
This is so cool! I could watch this mesmerizing machine hours in a row,
Its amazing how even with a machine like this you can find so many negative comments. only on youtube.
Not true, ask any firefighter/pumper driver operator. There are many design flaws in the production of Firetrucks, they never ask the operators what they need and where things should be placed etc... I would imagine its like that in the design of most things built by engineers. Theres always room for improvement...example, a ill placed truck mounted generator right beside the pump panel, even with a head set you have a hard time hearing the radio let alone the exhaust fumes....
I think what Doug is saying is that people can't just sit and say "that's really cool" without being critical and negative about it. It's a cool machine, design flaws or not.
They cannot be happy with anything outside themselves if not happy with them selves
This thing kicks ass. No more back ache! Love it!
Beautiful machine... Lifetime warranty... Wow! Now that's impressive!
I would only buy this if it comes with the funky sound track
I'ts on your PC under sample music. Kalimba by Mr Scruff
Talk about making life easy, this is one heck of a machine.
These wood processing machines are just fascinating... what a concept for small logs that are nearly perfectly straight and knotless. A lot of dough for something that can't process a log much over 20" in diameter. But MAN... what it can do with these little logs is amazing!!
Does it have a slow down knob so dry wood dosnt shoot across the yard? Looks like it has everything
My brother and I built a saw somewhat similar to this in the mid eighties using a 170 cid Ford Falcon engine that we put a governor and power takeoff on. A belt drive was used to transmit power to the saw, The saw was pulled down manually and returned with a spring.
We used a stripped down bull gear New Holland baler for a splitter. our cycle time was about the same as yours, perhaps a little faster We cut a 4 cord load in hour, We worked in the woods cutting full length lodgepole 40 to 60 ft down to a 4 in, top.
I see maybe four cords an hour on your conveyor you're spending to much time finishing one log and starting the next. You could speed this up by making your hold down so it holds the back end of the last block and stop the diagonal cuts. IMPRESSIVE MACHINE!!!
That's pretty cool. I do see one seemingly pervasive issue, with the last end of each log. It wants to roll around as it teeters on the edge of the chain. Just in this video there were at least 2 corrections where the chain had to be backed up to realign the cut, and then an odd butt cut made to square up again. The holddown arm maybe just isn't strong enough. Don't get me wrong, I've never built one of these, just noting a few things to possibly improve on. Also where the splitter piston goes back and forth, if the timing is off I can see a block of wood falling in on top the piston. Maybe just a lid to cover that up a bit. Otherwise this is a pretty slick machine. I'm impressed.
Well thought out piece of equipment. Fast and efficient. Big bucks for sure.
Wicked cool, how much do those suckers run?
You've got yourself a winner here
Will it stack a cord in my backyard?
2 mods. the support legs on the cab end.. they still push down straight. but they push down on a long arm that is pivoted on the other side. or a scissors set of arms so the cab does not rock with the movement of the saw.. perhaps a bolt on retrofit. that would be tiring all day for such and easy upgrade.. optional wider tires. so if you are pulling this into the woods or peoples yards it can float over softer areas. just curious how many conveyors can you daisy chain to move the wood closer to customers stacks..
What is largest diameter and length of log you can cut on this machine? Is the splitter head removable to run smaller pole wood? Can you run 5 or 6 pieces of pole wood at one time, like in a bundle? Is there a differant holder for a bundle of pole wood instead of the one used on the single log?
that things works great on logs that should be turned into lumber. But how does it work on crocked knotty elm, hickory or white oak.
Kurtis Lee
Thats the problem with all these machines! Timberwolf is the only one with a feed trough and log clamp designed for real firewood, but i dont know how they hold up speed-wise. Timberwolf has a rolling top clamp that keep constant pressure and forces the log fordward while holding tight to the last cut.
If you ever worked in a saw mill you would know why that's not lumber material!
These guys make great machines!
Do you really think those cull logs would make good lumber???? They are not even close to saw quality.
What an astonishingly impressive piece of equipment!
Fastest i have ever seen great job!!
very nice machine, very quick. i'd sugest, if there isn't already one, to put a sock over the dust extractor for the saw blade.what is the duty cycle of this machine? ( how many hours a day can it operate)
24
Agreed. A wool bale hung beneath the sawdust exit chute. That stuff is worth money. It can be compressed into firewood, sold as is to stock farms, etc.
Impressive. Does it come with heat and a.c.?
Impressive. Can you customise things slightly?
It takes how long to set up?
That is a very nice and quick machine would like to know more about it if That could be possible please let me know comment back and where I could purchase one and the price of it just so don't rock my socks thank you
I checked Home Depot, they were sold out.
Harbor Freight has a few.
Now that’s funny!
saw one at a yard sale the other day
Try lowes
Does the operator cab have heat and air conditioning?
Interesting, but how about a sawdust bin attachment? Folks like using that for a verity of purposes including heating.
I know most of the comments are old but still to everyone saying the pieces are to big, you can get different size pieces depending on how you have the machine set up. They were going for speed here so its a bigger cut.
I am just curious how your machine would handle Eucalyptus wood. For the most part, Euc is a very hard wood and the grain has a good twist to it. Like a barber sign. My 30 ton splitter had a hard time with it. And that was with a single wedge.
Amazing machine.How much $$ does it cost??
If it could only season it too....wow, that would be great!
Do you have sales rep in the states
How much would it cost to lease one of these for a few months? Or outright buy this particular model.
hey wat abut wood gas. fueling the unit with wood ethanol gas from the saw dust.
super stroj kde se to prodává v evropě a jaká cena?? Díky
suddenly everyone's a "firewood cutting" expert.
+percy thrillington Lazy humans that dont want to work....Want everything fast and easy... Hmmm like a planet plaque....
I like lazy people they are usually the ones to come up with ways to make things work easier and faster.
jacques dubois, I'm still laughing at this comment,...this is similar to saying " I don't mean to call you an idiot, but,...."
percy thrillington, this is lie saying,..." suddenly everyone's a car maker,.." etc. etc.......
Given the choice wouldn't we rather sit inside a weather proof cab and move levers or buttons all day, than standing outside sweating, or freezing and swinging an axe?
By the way, I do get your point though,..and this is how the 'wheel' get's made better, smoother, more round, and so on.
this video is very satisfying to watch..........
How would you like to be a stacker on the receiving end of this beast? It would keep you busy.
leonvandermaas You are aware this is a demonstration video, right? These machines are for sale to the industry and private businesses, so it depends on who buys one of these machines. If somebody bought one for his/her company, and if this somebody hired you to stack wood, you're stacking wood. It's their machine, their business, their rules.
you don't need to stack - pile it into a square containerized space like it was a load of potatoes or something ... this is more efficient - but ... if you want ... devise a machine that would do the stacking then ... there is the brilliance of ingenuity in the making
Kevin Olesik
Or just have steel mesh cages built that hold an approximate cord or face cord. Just load it to the top straight from the processor, deliver, and drop it off... done! Some loads may be slightly more or less. Cords and face cords are approximate measurements. And weighing is no good because freshly processed wood [of the same type] weighs more than seasoned wood.
USNVA Or just do what they actually do and drop it into a dump truck and deliver. fuck buying and handling cages.
It would keep a team busy
must be nice to have straight logs to cut.
Haha
This is one awesome machine. There are some details that the video doesn't point out. Like the bump stop retracts during the cut. The pavers are near the operators cab are cut on this machine from logs, just really short moves on the conveyor. There are some really minor things that I might want different but one thing that would be a big help. Use a fly wheel that ways like 200 pounds. That way you won't get near the blade slow down you do during the cut. You may even be able to go with a lower HP engine. The chip separator might be a little longer but not a big deal. The glass of the operators cab that face the log operations, well it may not be required by any agency, but it would be a really good idea to have bars or something to protect the operator should some thing go wrong. I've seen loaders with logs stuck through the cab. Overall, awesome. Hope you guys do really well with this machine.
and just one more thin i wonder if the splitter knife can be changes to one with more knifes if you like to have smaller pieces
the cab could have some lexan glass if you don't like to have bars
but all in all a great machine
excellent point about the bars on the window. At one point you see a chunk being thrown out of the staging hopper prior to the conveyor.
Who stacks the wood?
where can I get one and whats the price
I really like that unit a lot but I see one flaw when you come up to the last cut the log. What’s to turn so you don’t cut it straight the log holder has a hard time holding the log on that last cut. I do like the unit that has a grapple system that holds a log and slides it forward so you can cut it. The cord king is a great unit, but it has a few hiccups that it was one of them is certainly is very fast. If you can fix the hiccups, I think you’d have a better machine. 5:26
Somethin I would like to see is a big ass dumpster catchin the dust and when it's full, moved and lit on fire. That would be bad ass
430 am, and how i wound up here, i have no fuckin idea...pretty cool tho...
if it could only cook me breakfast & make me a coffee I'd be SET for LIFE!
That seems to cut the logs very short. That seems a little stumpy to the person that does not use wood lol. Is the shorter log better than a longer one?
Need one with a prentice loader attached to it that I can run out of the cab that has a power plant with wheels underneath of it that drives across the log yard.
How much?
this machine is awesome ... i love efficiency and effectiveness and this machine is all that !
It’s not being negative. It’s being helpful I cut lotta firewood in filling a lot of timber I’m not trying to be an ass. I am trying to be helpful things that I see I think cord king is a great unit. They’ve been doing it for a long time. It’s always better to have a few comments even if it’s a negative comment that way they can fix it and sell more products.
best yet !!!!!!!!
Nice if you have straight logs.
Even if crooked and smaller on average one man can do about one full cord 128 cubic feet per hour so I used to cut split and deliver 6 to 8 cord a day vs only 2 doing by hand
Your machine is paid off after 4 years if you finance with 25% down
put dumpy bags at rear of saw to collect saw dust and sell as animal bedding?
+martin jeffery I thought it would be good food for my termite farm ! :-)
martin jeffery e
martin jeffery I know I'm late but there's a handful of good firewoods that are not suitable to use as animal bedding.
Lotta big pieces goin up...
The conveyor cannot keep up with cutting/spitting action. The spit pieces keep getting backed up before the conveyor can move them away.
I've ran an older model you can not automate the machine when the nasty stuff comes through sometimes it will twist or turn sideways. It was a farely quick machine the weak point is the surround those cuts get dropped into. After while it will get beat up and expand out allowing the wood to move alot.
Checked into this machine and others a few years back. We were doing a fair amount of wood for outdoor wood boilers and bigger wood was called for. These processors excel at putting out wood for customers wanting BTU. However fireplace wood users, bulk of my customers, it definitely requires another splitting or three. However, grabbing a large piece instead of a big round and popping into the lucrative fireplace size is sped up greatly by first running through the processor. Would have to do A BUNCH of wood to see those efficiencies put more $$ in your pocket. It is fun to watch if nothing else.
P
💯⭐️🇹🇷👍İyi makina 5 barmarmagında 5 marifet maşallah COLD KİNG daha iyisini yapana kadar bununla idareedin❤
this thing is a beast
One of the fastest I have seen on UA-cam for sure, I think it has a lot to do with the saw BLADE versus a chain. How much for one of these beauties? Awesome!
115000
Very nice machine... the one I built from spare parts on the farm was about half as fast. It did work faitly well though.
I see that many have asked for the price. I found a few used ones on the net for around $80,000.00, so the new ones have got to be $100,000.00 +
Wondering what happens when the saw hits a nail or chunk of barbed wire....
Very impressive machine, though.
+Stephen Round It would cut right through it, would dull the blade a little though.
Stephen Round why do u wounded? The same thing would happen to this like it would happen to any other saw
Stephen Round
Schön mit anzusehen. Da geht was! Sicherheitstechnisch sind Brennholzautomaten auch zum Bevorzugen!
Quisiera saber si tienen representante en españa
They should have some idea for collecting that sawdust instead of it going on the ground there must be something they can do about it
Thomas Knight u would cry about that wouldn't u? How about be happy u ain't sitting on a bucket with a five horse splitter and just shovel it up
I'm sure this was just a demo. If you were really using it you would collect the saw dust and sell it. I think horse barns like to use it for bedding. Nothing goes to waste. It's just a demo man, relax.
Thomas Knight it wouldn't be hard to tape a pipe around it yourself
Automated bag N tie system. 25lb bags.
If you use burlap, it's "environmentally friendly", and the purchaser gets a partial refund for returning bags
It doesn't stake it ?
Very nice machine and very fast. I really like it.
Looks great but still the same effort and time it takes me to splice up the logs by hand on the farm
What a beast !
What has speed got to do with this?
The fast cycle time lets users process more firewood in less time! If you're interested in more info about this machine, check out our website or send us an email at info@cordking.ca!
I have never seen any of these machines cut and split Hedge fire wood also called Osage Orange. Hardest wood in North America I do believe.
I gave up trying to hand split a type of wood that is apparently called Cypress
No idea on the spelling. My buddy broke 3 maul handles and said fuck it
This is very impressive indeed!
Price?
Actually, it's about a 3.5 second cycle time, beginning of cut to beginning of next cut. Cycle time is, of course the time of a complete cycle.
Actually, you're off by about as much as they are! It's exactly 3s for the first log in this video, starting at 2:25 and beginning the tenth cut at 2:52. That's 9 full cycles completed in 27s, for 3s per full cycle. This is under continuous operation, for a log close to 20" in diameter, so it's possible that with a softer wood and smaller diameter log, the time is closer to 2.5 -- or under bad conditions, closer to 3.5.
Fantastic!!!
How much price
love this unit thanks
Wood is still to big for most wood stoves.
No its not....most new stoves with secondary burn are much larger...20- 30 inch lenghts. My stove burns 24" and holds 90 lbs of wood and burns for 25 hrs.
@@jedidiah5131 Don't be a pest, Jesse. Those are huge chunks of wood, and most woods don't burn well unless you have multiple pieces in. You can get a bigger stove, but most stoves are still smaller.
@@opcn18 You mean Jesse from "Pure Living For Life" excellent channel, Homesteading, Timber frame build, check it out...Love the channel.
@@opcn18 I think Jessie is referring to his Ebola infused hot tub.
@@opcn18 What channel? Oh you mean "pure living for Life"...excellent channel, another 1000 subs this month...some videos have over a million views....gotta like that.
The uprights for the green chain look pretty skimpy
This will fill up a wood shed no Tim 120 ×120 I love it .
Decent. Until a log goes in sideways. What happens then? And I see troubles when u get to the end of the log.
It gets split sideways. That's what happens.
Amazing !!!
Very nice, I like it:D
need some red oak on that thing ,, great machine for straight wood
Gj jhjkl
,,i
Cost?
@@rustymason3860 $170k
Impressive
Damn they have somebody was wood splitter awesome
One major problem, operator neck, having to turn it to the left all of the time. They should have set the cab, so, so it can swivel, so the operator can look straight ahead
This is a pretty fast machine.
I like my logs 18-24"
This looks like it's doing 16 or less
my old boss had one of these, you can adjust the length hydraulically.
awesome, but big pieces coming out. Prob too big for some stoves but very impressive. Fastest I've seen.
Sure it's fast but the logs are still pretty big and would still need splitting down for many wood burners. An oak log that size is still going to want a two year seasoning process before you can burn them.
My burner takes logs 10-12" long and ideally 3" diameter and that's pretty normal here in the UK.
Most 🇺🇸 stoves are 16 to 22 inches.
whats with all these short peaces of wood, dang at least 16 in.
the length is most likely adjustable
at 4:47 look at the cab it made by john Deere
No, it just has a John Deere engine.
how do you know
noah Speed bump The processor is made by Cord King and one of their engine options is John Deere.
GFWoodchuck ok cool thank you for replying to my commint
wow, thats fast!
The only problem I see is that some of the pieces coming out of that thing are huge!, like too big
That is the downside of production firewood, the upside is the consumer gets semi loads of firewood at a much better price than if they were to buy it from cord-a-day guys. I can fit a 16" diameter log 30" long in my stove so I wouldn't complain about any of this. One would have to buy or build a kindling wedge if one wanted business from all the old ladies (I have a few that demand madrone no larger than 3" because it's smooth and they don't get splinters and it's light enough to handle) You can't fill every niche in the market with one tool though.
Ii
Thedeaconoftrade dunno about this particular model but you can usually swap out the blade configuration to chop smaller logs
smart machine