Yeah it hit me hard, because i can see myself doing that. It cemented into my memory way better than if they had just said it. If i bought that, I can't see myself forgetting it now.
Tony is still a great salesman. He introduces the product and allows the product to sell itself. And having grown up around folks from eastern Europe and later Wisconsin, I love his accent. For me it is comforting.
Nice machine! A few other channels have them but Tony does a good review! It’s definitely a back saver. I think the conveyor will pick up better when that flap wears in a little. I also think it will work better if the conveyor is at a lower angle. You did have it at a very high grade/angle. Thanks for another episode of “TONYS TOYS” GNI
WOOOOW, that splitter is a beast. Thank you for sharing all the ins and outs of setting up and running the machine. I've seen different channels use this machine and I've never seen the points that you showed. Thanks to Tony for sharing his machine and thanks to both of you for sharing this video with us.
Great video Chris! We really appreciate you guys putting it together to show us window shoppers the pros and cons of the machine. I also agree with Stuart, there doesn't appear to be much room for error with the wedge coming down that close to your fingers. Especially with that pedal. Like driving a vehicle, we can get froggy with it sometimes. I could tell that was concern too from the way you were holding it. Regarding the tranfer to the basket, it may help the wood transfer to basket a little easier if Tony lowered the conveyor. That's a significant incline before it tranfers to the basket. I'm sure he'll figure it out. Thanks again for sharing the experience with us.
Sure beats the heck out of “the Glacier!” Awesome machine and great video showing the ins and outs. Chris you’re right, you do want one with the amount of wood you produce.
Tony, Growing up we had a small farm (6 acres) which we farmed with a tiller (8 tine, with a 16 HP Tecumseh, yeah it was a beast, it would drag you down the row, like breaking a bronco), after I left home my dad had a friend take the handlebars off and mount a 3 point hitch to it and put it on a Sears 16 HP garden tractor which he primarily used for just turn plowing and rowing, in his later years he got an attachment for the Tecumseh (looked like just a bolt that mounted on the rope wind and a socket for his drill and he would start it with the drill, worked like a charm... if you're curious, we had a process where we would start with 2 of us at one end of the field (700' rows) and one at the other, one of us would take it to one end, the other would take over and run it back and so on an so forth, it would take us about 6-8 hours (depending on the field condition) to till between the rows of the 6 acres... long hot... hot... days but rewarding, at harvest time we would take the 68 VW bus, take the center seat out and ride the rows breaking corn and tossing it in to the bus and taking it to the farmers market, renting a stall and selling fresh sweet corn, cucumbers, squash etc. , late 60's early 70's... good times and life lessons.
I've watched every youtuber demoing the axis and this was by far the best overall coverage of the setup issues. I am more than interested in purchasing one but waiting to see a Kubota diesel version. As we get older the higher work table and conveyor into the totes make perfect sense to me. Just one word of caution. Get in the habit of keeping your thumbs on the side of the blocks. One moment of inattention and you are missing an important digit.
@@AATreeService 2 years later...nice! I just see more reliability from my diesel engines than gas-powered ones that are not used continually. Gas goes stale and carburetors get gummed up. Diesel might not be an option on the Axis but they do put them on some of their other high performing splitters. I was intrigued by the electric option but you need 3 phase service which I do not have.
@@briansilver9652 I was just wondering that’s all. The cost for a diesel is about 3-4 times the cost of a gas engine so that’s what really got me. I have never had any issues with any of my gas engines as long as I run an ounce or 2 of sea foam for gas stabilizer and water displacer before I store them for winter
Down below the table, it appears to have 2 fork channels to use with the forks of a tractor or skid steer to move the machine around the wood lot without having to tow it. I've been known to be wrong once or twice in the past however.
That's exactly what they are used for. I believe Andrew from Eastonmade has a video showing how to move the Axis with pallet forks on his Kubota tractor.
Chris & Tony ~ I back watching this vid....my AXIS arrived today....and WOW and DOUBLE WOW....I was and am intimidated for sure! Did not have enough muscle at the end of the day to get conveyor attached. I need Tony here!!! CBJ
About the conveyer grab & go issues, I have observed several companies wood conveyers functions & pick up efficiency & noticed several Easton made units hesitancy to grab wood immediately from the first pick up "paddle". I think just installing higher "paddles" by at least double the current height And sharper leading edges, instead of radiused edges, would help immensely to increase the grab & go 1st paddle efficiency. Easton Made is awesome stuff, made to last, it seems! Thanks for another "Tony's Toys" that make money episode! Paul from S. Central TX..
I think you and Tony need to start a weekly equipment review........ I like the years of knowledge mixed with practical sense... a must see combo for any potential buyer..... keep up the great work..
Wow!! that is one neat splitter, must be awesome to work standing straight up and down, and to just push the splits to the conveyer and not have to worry about throwing splits. You guys should do a segment called "Wine time w/ Wives of the woodyard" I'm interested in what they think with all the time spent on cutting, splitting, stacking and selling; getting calls to pickup tree's, wood delivery's, buying more equipment.
Extremely thorough review, with the good features and considerations or limitations also! Like a lot of equipment, setup and understanding proper controls is very important!
First scene I thought you were at Outdoors with the Morgan’s😆…excellent presentation and demonstration. Yeah there’s some bugs that need to be reworked on this… 1) Table hinge needs to be piano style. Period. End of story. It could be as simple as just sliding a loose fit, thick wall, mechanical tube steel bushing or bushings on pin as it’s inserted. Bushings will act like “rollers” and negate any hangup on either table edges regardless of which direction wood is moving. 2) table cylinder connect. Yeah that’s not ideal. The neighbors home built vertical uses a mount that requires no unhooking and folds 180*. Similar to powersplit except you need to be able to assist table for the over center transition and at the same time the valve direction will reverse. It’s real simple and easy to use 3) Table lift speed. As much as it pains me to say it I believe the inline restrictors 🤬 forgot to get installed. 4) Elevator pickup. What I believe would make the pickup issue go away is if one were to mount a guide plate from elevator hinge to just ahead of the rubber debris flap. That way flap would not be getting trapped between wood butt end and paddle. 5) Drop leg on conveyor. I just don’t like weight hanging on a strap. A simple gravity drop leg that folds out when conveyor is being deployed I think would be reassuring and more stable. Man…if that machine were to find it’s way to my shop for a day I’d have all the bugs fixed and probably a lot more!…Knowing my past history.
Went back and rewatched want to thank Tony for the heads up on hour meter.👍 Used on my own equipment now. I am building a homemade version of axis on steroids. Trying to get ideas. This video was AWSOME showed everything about the machine 👍👍😎
That's a monster of a machine! I can see where production would be fairly high!! I would say to either oil or grease that chain....wouldn't hurt anything!! Stay safe my friend!!
Great review guys. Really appreciate the support. I will get tony to check the cylinder for the log lift. There is normally a restrictor in one of the fittings to slow it down. It may have been missed.
@Eastonmade Wood Splitters - any plans to improve the intake on the conveyer? It seems like wood always sits at the bottom of the conveyer and has a hard job getting picked up.
Good answer Andrew (assuming its you). Some do not seem to recognize that the smooth cleats help to prevent major damage to the conveyor in that a "stuck" piece of wood is far more likely to pop loose with your design if it gets jammed with others than it would be if there were teeth grabbing it. The lower the angle the easier it goes on the conveyor!
@@christophersmith5303 makes sense. I guess it looks like the wood is getting stuck on that black sweeper...I was thinking of more of a wider intake that funnels the wood down above that black sweeper so that the wood doesn't have to get pulled off the sweeper.
I"m glad you showed the blooper lowering the conveyor. That is a moment where a person could have thrown out there back or could have gotten smoked in the face with an angry winch handle.
8 to 12 inch pieces will go right up the elevator. For 16's, lower the elev and/or make the elev trough deeper. It's the teeter-totter effect.- Somebody, during his turn, was splitting pretty big, bigger than Tony's. Really enjoy Tony and his orientations. I have some machines, but they are not "toys". Good tools, to a hard working man, are to be used carefully, and enjoyed. Thanks, both of you.
The rubber flappy thing is something that when I was using a processor was 1 of the banes of my existence. I have come to the conclusion after spending a LOT of hours watching wood not go up a conveyor that there was 2 things that I would try once I got around to trying once I got around to building 1 for personal use. The first is to add some bolts at least twice the height of the scrapers so they either pick up the blocks or at least rotate them and secondly and potentially most importantly is the change the rubber flappy thingy for a broom head angled maybe 20 degrees off being at right angles so that the flicking action as the scraper passes under the shrapnel protector doesn't occur across the whole scraper at the same time. My other alternative thought was to put in 2 rubber flappy things. The lower 1 would be a match for what is on the Axis and it would stop chips getting under the tail drum and a second located about an inch higher than that (in the position that the Axis one is in) and that is of a height that brushes the tops of the scrapers and chain but it doesn't flick at all which is what allows wood to build up. The processor I used to use would cut anything that would fit through the 20" x 12" aperture. To get wood cut fast I would fill that space with as many sleeper backs (leftovers from railway sleeper production) as possible so that every cut every 8s or so there could be 5 or 6 blocks (about a wheelbarrow load) dropping onto the conveyor. There wasn't much time to get the blocks out of the road before the next lot dropped in.
@@jakebredthauer5100 . There's actually a couple of really bad videos on my channel of the 2 saws I worked on and used nearly 30 years ago. The video is pretty shocking as it's from a VHS-C camcorder recording that was transferred to VHS before being digitised. Binding was always a bit of a problem but the saw (known as small saw on my videos) had a thicker than usual 3ft circular saw on it direct driver from a 180hp supercharged Nissan diesel. The clamping mechanism was actually multiple stages with a row of springs with spikes right at the front and some 4" spring loaded "tubes" in a couple of rows further back. When the saw was humping it was knocking through a truckload of my little truck in about 20-25 minutes. That's around 7m3 or 2 cords of Aussie hardwood. Great machine that I cracked the shits with and stopped cutting with due to the conveyor.
I am on the list. Hopefully their production will increase enough I can get it this winter but for now I am still out over a year. I ordered mine without the conveyor as I can get a larger convey to pile wood higher for not much more than haveing the conveyor attached.
Ok so we definitely need to set something up.before and after you get it. I am saving for a Wolfe Ridge but seeing equipment run in person is way better than on video..
I’ve used chain conveyors and belts. The chain conveyor will last longer then a belt but the chain conveyor is noisier then a belt. Lowering the angle is the key to prices surfing over the chain. Vertical splitters push the wood up the conveyor untill the paddles grab it. Peace
@@InTheWoodyard I just ran it today and kicked up the conveyer speed up to about 5 or 6 and that seemed to help clear the logs faster but it really reduces cycle time.
It looks like putting it lower would make it work better, but it should work at a higher angle. I'm thinking the angle of the bottom is too shallow. I don't know how to describe it. That spanning-part full of bolts that holds the debris flap. THAT part needs to be more vertical. It's acting like a cup, and is being a place for the base of the wood. The chain-rung thing only clears the flapper BEYOND that cup area. So the base of the wood that is supposed to catch on the rung isn't even getting close. If that was more vertical, the rung would get to the wood.
Guys this was so Kool - thank you for the detailed and experience reporting. The lead time today is now 14 months for the Axis. I'm going to watch the last half after dinner! ~ Keith
I noticed that Adam from Hometown Acres has the same problem with his splitter. It might be a design flaw or you just need to lower the elevator down to reduce the angle. Good demo, thanks.
Just a thought...before lowering the conveyor, if it's long enough, could the winch strap be flipped backwards (over the log stripper plates and behind the ram) to use the winch for safely foolin' with the log lifter? It looks like the hole in the lifter side plate is big enough for the hook. A factory welded on guide ring somewhere on the top of the vertical frame, big enough for the hook to fit through, for an up and over use of the strap wouldn't be a bad idea either. Ring could also be used to lift the entire unit with an excavator or bucket if needed. (I know, I know...it's got fork tubes! lol.) But ya never know when another option might be handy or needed. Been operating equipment big and small from half ton to 30 ton for 55 of my 68 yrs... experience says options matter. Also a welded on bracket to pin the lifter upright (using the existing hole in it's side plate.) I'd be real tempted to try scrapping that debris guard too. It's a nice idea but "it ain't helpin'!" Maybe there's more to it than I know but it seems whatever debris made it down through there would just pile up underneath....dunno.....maybe just a center piece of sweep to keep chips out of the chain sprocket Best demo vid yet...good work men! Ya listenin' Andrew Eastonmmade?
Can it be configured so the conveyer is on the right and lift table on left. Conveyer is set to high. Is my guess why it’s not taking the wood up. How many ton is it ? What is the cycle time ? I think I’d still like the ultra.
Looks like lowering the angle has been mentioned. As a professional viewer of wood cutting videos, the other thing I noticed was, the max height needed to be raised another inch or so. It looked like the amount of time saved with a shorter stroke was used up by fiddling with wood that didn't slip right under the wedge. I'll be looking for another video in the future, once you guys get some more practice on this machine. It looks like a great machine.
Great machine, maybe lower the conveyor to lesser angle. Waiting to see which new machine you will get, not trying to spend your money. Have a Safe Day
Eastonmade still needs to put a chute on the end of that little conveyor. That would make it much easier to use when loading bins and trailers and a bit more intuitive to run the conveyor at less of an angle. I do like watching the axis work through some big chunks of yard tree wood.
The intro music and sequence was really neat! Got a moisture meter, brand name is General, and it seems to work really well. Moisture of the Ash I bucked yesterday was 17-21%, and the oak stringers was 20% about 1/2in from the outside edge, 35% in the middle. How long do you think it will take the oak at 35% to dry down to 20%? Would be a great video for you to do on different wood with initial moisture and how long to normally dry it down to 20% in the open with good sun. The Axis is a really sweet splitter. Not sure if want to go that route or with a Wolfe Ridge. Can't beat the working table of the Axis, plus the conveyor can help you load the trailer and you can go store the wood anywhere in the woodyard. Seems to me that splitting with the Axis and conveyor into a trailer so you can keep the same wood in one spot in the woodyard instead of scattered about.
The opening was so dramatic I know I liked it so did a few other too.. Good overall review, I think its one of the best I have seen so far on this piece of equipment..
As others have stated, the angle of the conveyor was far too steep. The Axis really seems to shine when you cut through multiple splits at the same time. It has plenty of power to do this and it makes the operation more efficient if you can make bigger splits holding even quartered sections together so that you can split it in 4 presses of the pedal instead of 8. It is a very nice machine. Total overkill for a guy cutting firewood for himself but more power to Tony for buying one! You would do really well with this and it would certainly up your production. The most attractive thing about the Axis for me and the reason I have considered it is that it really saves your back. I very much like the large workbench with the lift so there is no bending over! One question - given your log supplier and the smaller diameter logs you get from him, would you get more wood if you took the big stuff vs the small stuff and what would the pricing difference be? I know your brother seems to get stuff that is much bigger but sounds like it's raining wood where he is at. You could definitely handle that stuff with an Axis pretty easily, but what would the economics be if you got a log truck of the bigger stuff vs the smaller pieces?
Usually no price difference for me, but yes you do get a lot of wood from the big logs for sure. What I have found though is the huge amount of work and time needed to work them down in size is the killer for me.
The bark and smaller tree pieces should be saved into 5 gallon bucket’s to start fires with or simply burn in your outdoor boiler. Waste nothing and you will want nothing. A buddy of mine heats his house and shop with an outdoor boiler and literally being out in the boonies, his nearest neighbor is 38 miles away he burns his trash and once a year loads up his 1 ton dump truck and hauls all the scrap metal cans and other items that are steel based. He said his last trip paid him just over $30.00. Food for thought
What benefit does that conveyor give over just setting the tote nearer and throwing the logs in directly? It seems like the same amount of work to put them on the conveyor.
Good to see got the price out of the 12/22 what he paid for they definitely cost more now in the beginning of 2023 here. If you lower the conveyor a little more it probably take the wood up better but the did a up grade on the paddles on the chain GOOD CHOICE 👍👍👍
This type of spliter has been popular in the uk for many years.and i have used them frequently. My only compaint is that the side tables are to narrow and would be better if they enveloped the user more .everything seems a little tight big rounds once split have nowhere to go .i hope you get to read this.
They have the same problem on all of Andrew's videos with the wood not feeding on the conveyor, he let's it pile up and eventually it all just grabs and goes. I've noticed other companies the build wood conveyors notch teeth into their cleats to catch the surface of the wood better and even turn the cleats over so the open section on the bottom works as a tooth instead of the smooth top side. Heck just try flipping the chian over and using it that way.
I have installed, tuned up, and repaired hundreds of conveyors in different applications. I would remove that silly rubber wiper thing and try running without it. What little wood debris falls through won't hurt anything but you can then adjust or remount it if you want to.
For efficiency I have seen others keep the round (or portion of a round) together during the split. Do slice, slice, slice in one direction then rotate the entire round 90 degrees then slice, slice, slice in the other direction and in that (ideal) case you can have 16 pieces of wood with 6 strokes of the wedge. (EDIT...I see that you were doing this with the smaller rounds) Also, looks like the conveyor might catch the wood better if the incline was not as steep.
This is my pet peeve with Easton Mades conveyor. The bar that takes the wood has round edges and doesn’t grab the wood properly. I think that bar should have teeth so it solves that problem. If I were you I would place your order now so you can get an Axis and make your life so much easier.
Eastonmade should design and offer a couple of "clean-out cleats" to put on the conveyor. So that a couple of times during the rotation of the chain, the cleats might get a better bite on anything hanging up.
The conveyor issue could be a matter of just throwing the split pieces a little further up the conveyor. Alternatively, you could lower the angle of the conveyor so the split piece isn't fighting gravity as much.
Hey Chris, with the large volume of wood you process , this machine would pay for itself in no-time. Very little to none, kindling pieces , means more wood sold and would greatly reduce the hundreds of wheelbarrow loads you now take to your low spot in the back of your yard. On those brutal hot days you could split and barely break a sweat , well maybe , seems like much less effort Have a good day
I've been considering one of these for the last month or so, but damn............the price has damn-near doubled on it in the last year. Tony was saying that the cost when he got his (which I assume was a year ago, or thereabouts, since that's how old the video is), the cost was 7K for the Axis without the conveyer, plus 4K for the conveyer. If you look on Eastonmade's site now, it's 13K without the conveyer!!! Man oh man, I know everything is more now with inflation, but almost double???
You need a flow control valve on the input to the table raising. What this does is limit the volume( speed) of hydraulic oil but not the pressure(power) to the cylinder. slower but more control. Safety, safety, safety. pipe it after the control lever. Very cheap at princess auto or tsc or harbour freight (20.00). They have an adjustment screw to fine tune the volume, just like the conveyor system only smaller and permanent adjustment unless you use tools.
Good high quality machine but my bug bear would be that the conveyor doesn't pick the split wood up very well at steep angles. A lot of time lost getting the paddles to carry it away from the work area.🤔
Easton made makes great equipment .The problem i had is when i called them about a unit, i was told a 18 month or longer wait that is just a long time for a person running a business!
Regarding the log lift reattaching to the pin after transportation, did you try letting the table go to the ground and adjusting the hydraulics til they line up?
Absolutely phenomenal review. Is there anything on the motor for your conveyor that indicates what size the motor is by chance? I'm working on a design for a conveyor for my splitter I already built but i can't seem to find a whole lot of info on what size hydraulic motor anyone uses on their conveyors. I'd be buying new so just want to size it properly from the get-go. Any help would be appreciated.
Good morning Chris!! 😀😀 I just love the Axis. Just because of being able to stand up straight and split with it. A while back Andrew did a demo of one with a longer splitter blade on it and was wondering if maybe he should make that change to it. From what I have seen I think the blade could be another 4 to 6 inches longer and it would work better with the larger rounds. But I haven't ran one yet. What do you guys think? Take care my friends!!😀😀👍👍 Logger Al
@@InTheWoodyard I'm considering spending the time it takes to convert my Troybuilt into something comparable if I can find the time. I'm going to get together with Tony one of these days and take a look at it just to use it for a reference . I think for just a bunch of hours and a few hundred dollars worth of metal and hydraulic hoses I can make one fairly close to the base machine.
Tony should post his Axis review on the Eastonmande website. Very thorough. That being said, there is no way the Axis holds a candle to the 12-22 for any application other than if a person were primarily interested in selling bundle wood. Much slower and way more handling of every round. I predict Tony will miss the 12-22 after the novelty of the Axis wears off.....unless selling bundle wood if a bid part of his future. the 12-22 is a brute and best-in-class by a wide margin.
The conveyor bars need some small teeth welded on them, if there is clearance room for them. If I remember correctly the prototype of this machine had bars with teeth. For some reason they removed them for the production model. Probably because of lawyers.
Chris, If I had your money I'd would be getting one on order for the wood yard ,you could easily sell the one your using now. Differently a work horse splitter GNI
Coming from a construction and heavy equipment back ground, I’m curious how they get away from having any type of guarding for personnel protection on the return for the conveyor? It seems like if you used this in a commercial application osha would have something to say about that.
Thinking your convayor is set to steep have it set at lower angle so it works less and sets bit more flatter just an idea from my experience with convayor systems
Does Tony have a UA-cam Channel ?? He certainly has a great knowledge and lots of good stuff ! Tony and your brothers certainly have been great added segments to your Channel , don’t know what the viewership numbers are for these segments? Good Stuff Chris !
I had an Eastonmade on order when they switched to Briggs. I cancelled the order.It was a bait and switch situation and they were not very upstanding. Too bad.
Thanks for leaving in the whoopsie with forgetting to lock the winch on the first attempt to deploy the conveyor. Great content!
Yeah it hit me hard, because i can see myself doing that. It cemented into my memory way better than if they had just said it.
If i bought that, I can't see myself forgetting it now.
Yes it was exciting!
I did that ONCE with a boat winch, that was enough for me!
Tony is still a great salesman. He introduces the product and allows the product to sell itself. And having grown up around folks from eastern Europe and later Wisconsin, I love his accent. For me it is comforting.
Yes, tony is the man!
Nice machine! A few other channels have them but Tony does a good review! It’s definitely a back saver. I think the conveyor will pick up better when that flap wears in a little. I also think it will work better if the conveyor is at a lower angle. You did have it at a very high grade/angle. Thanks for another episode of “TONYS TOYS” GNI
Thanks as always for watching TODD!
Check out the mod this guy's done on the conveyer to make it work better. It's at the 8:08 mark of the vid.
ua-cam.com/video/vjhnK0dRviQ/v-deo.html
WOOOOW, that splitter is a beast. Thank you for sharing all the ins and outs of setting up and running the machine. I've seen different channels use this machine and I've never seen the points that you showed. Thanks to Tony for sharing his machine and thanks to both of you for sharing this video with us.
Thanks for watching Steven!
Great video Chris! We really appreciate you guys putting it together to show us window shoppers the pros and cons of the machine. I also agree with Stuart, there doesn't appear to be much room for error with the wedge coming down that close to your fingers. Especially with that pedal. Like driving a vehicle, we can get froggy with it sometimes. I could tell that was concern too from the way you were holding it. Regarding the tranfer to the basket, it may help the wood transfer to basket a little easier if Tony lowered the conveyor. That's a significant incline before it tranfers to the basket. I'm sure he'll figure it out. Thanks again for sharing the experience with us.
Thanks for the calm reply Shannon!
Have used Fluid Film for years in trucking/garage use. On chains, hydraulic valve controls, moving parts, etc. Love it.
Cool, I have not but I will give it a try, I like the way it works! Thanks John!
Sure beats the heck out of “the Glacier!” Awesome machine and great video showing the ins and outs. Chris you’re right, you do want one with the amount of wood you produce.
Tony, Growing up we had a small farm (6 acres) which we farmed with a tiller (8 tine, with a 16 HP Tecumseh, yeah it was a beast, it would drag you down the row, like breaking a bronco), after I left home my dad had a friend take the handlebars off and mount a 3 point hitch to it and put it on a Sears 16 HP garden tractor which he primarily used for just turn plowing and rowing, in his later years he got an attachment for the Tecumseh (looked like just a bolt that mounted on the rope wind and a socket for his drill and he would start it with the drill, worked like a charm... if you're curious, we had a process where we would start with 2 of us at one end of the field (700' rows) and one at the other, one of us would take it to one end, the other would take over and run it back and so on an so forth, it would take us about 6-8 hours (depending on the field condition) to till between the rows of the 6 acres... long hot... hot... days but rewarding, at harvest time we would take the 68 VW bus, take the center seat out and ride the rows breaking corn and tossing it in to the bus and taking it to the farmers market, renting a stall and selling fresh sweet corn, cucumbers, squash etc. , late 60's early 70's... good times and life lessons.
Sounds like great fun!
I've watched every youtuber demoing the axis and this was by far the best overall coverage of the setup issues. I am more than interested in purchasing one but waiting to see a Kubota diesel version. As we get older the higher work table and conveyor into the totes make perfect sense to me. Just one word of caution. Get in the habit of keeping your thumbs on the side of the blocks. One moment of inattention and you are missing an important digit.
Yes, you are right about the thumbs, I need them!
Why do you need a diesel
@@AATreeService 2 years later...nice! I just see more reliability from my diesel engines than gas-powered ones that are not used continually. Gas goes stale and carburetors get gummed up. Diesel might not be an option on the Axis but they do put them on some of their other high performing splitters. I was intrigued by the electric option but you need 3 phase service which I do not have.
@@briansilver9652 I was just wondering that’s all. The cost for a diesel is about 3-4 times the cost of a gas engine so that’s what really got me. I have never had any issues with any of my gas engines as long as I run an ounce or 2 of sea foam for gas stabilizer and water displacer before I store them for winter
Down below the table, it appears to have 2 fork channels to use with the forks of a tractor or skid steer to move the machine around the wood lot without having to tow it. I've been known to be wrong once or twice in the past however.
That's exactly what they are used for. I believe Andrew from Eastonmade has a video showing how to move the Axis with pallet forks on his Kubota tractor.
Yup, you are correct!
Yes!
Chris & Tony ~ I back watching this vid....my AXIS arrived today....and WOW and DOUBLE WOW....I was and am intimidated for sure! Did not have enough muscle at the end of the day to get conveyor attached. I need Tony here!!! CBJ
Congrats! That is a great machine!
@@InTheWoodyard Thank You!
Great review, Chris 👍 the axis is a BEAST! Never realized how big they were until you were standing next to it. Helps put things in perspective
Thanks Russ, yes it is a massive machine for sure!
@@InTheWoodyard tel costs
Jeez Louis!! Lower the conveyor!! Gravity is killing you! LOL!! Great video!!
Yup, that was the first time using it also the cleats on the chain have been changed to much better ones.
About the conveyer grab & go issues, I have observed several companies wood conveyers functions & pick up efficiency & noticed several Easton made units hesitancy to grab wood immediately from the first pick up "paddle". I think just installing higher "paddles" by at least double the current height And sharper leading edges, instead of radiused edges, would help immensely to increase the grab & go 1st paddle efficiency. Easton Made is awesome stuff, made to last, it seems! Thanks for another "Tony's Toys" that make money episode! Paul from S. Central TX..
They have changed the design on most of the conveyors paddles.
I think you and Tony need to start a weekly equipment review........ I like the years of knowledge mixed with practical sense... a must see combo for any potential buyer..... keep up the great work..
I second the motion.
Same here.. Even though I probably wouldn't use 95% of it, would still be useful information to someone.
Good idea Robert!
Okay David!
As long as you all watch, that is what matters!
Had to watch you and Tony work tonight so I would get tired just to fall asleep. Tony is an extremely informative guy!
Glad you enjoyed it, did you sleep well!
@@InTheWoodyard I was so tired after watching you guys I slept like a baby!
Wow!! that is one neat splitter, must be awesome to work standing straight up and down, and to just push the splits to the conveyer and not have to worry about throwing splits. You guys should do a segment called "Wine time w/ Wives of the woodyard" I'm interested in what they think with all the time spent on cutting, splitting, stacking and selling; getting calls to pickup tree's, wood delivery's, buying more equipment.
Yeah, bending over is wear and tear none of us needs. I love this splitter!
The standing straight is beautiful! And the foot petal.
Extremely thorough review, with the good features and considerations or limitations also! Like a lot of equipment, setup and understanding proper controls is very important!
Yes, we will work out the bugs.
First scene I thought you were at Outdoors with the Morgan’s😆…excellent presentation and demonstration.
Yeah there’s some bugs that need to be reworked on this…
1) Table hinge needs to be piano style. Period. End of story. It could be as simple as just sliding a loose fit, thick wall, mechanical tube steel bushing or bushings on pin as it’s inserted. Bushings will act like “rollers” and negate any hangup on either table edges regardless of which direction wood is moving.
2) table cylinder connect. Yeah that’s not ideal. The neighbors home built vertical uses a mount that requires no unhooking and folds 180*. Similar to powersplit except you need to be able to assist table for the over center transition and at the same time the valve direction will reverse. It’s real simple and easy to use
3) Table lift speed. As much as it pains me to say it I believe the inline restrictors 🤬 forgot to get installed.
4) Elevator pickup. What I believe would make the pickup issue go away is if one were to mount a guide plate from elevator hinge to just ahead of the rubber debris flap. That way flap would not be getting trapped between wood butt end and paddle.
5) Drop leg on conveyor. I just don’t like weight hanging on a strap. A simple gravity drop leg that folds out when conveyor is being deployed I think would be reassuring and more stable.
Man…if that machine were to find it’s way to my shop for a day I’d have all the bugs fixed and probably a lot more!…Knowing my past history.
Those are all good ideas Garny! You could do a good job on it I am sure!
Awesome machine. Chris I see the wheels are turning in your mind!!! My suggestion also would be to lower conveyor. Have a wonderful rest of the day!!!
It does need some work yet.
Went back and rewatched want to thank Tony for the heads up on hour meter.👍 Used on my own equipment now. I am building a homemade version of axis on steroids. Trying to get ideas. This video was AWSOME showed everything about the machine 👍👍😎
Thanks Tony is the man!
I think those paddles on the conveyor chain could benefit from some type of grabbers or teeth to better transfer the wood up?
Conveyor angle was too steep
The teeth might cause other problems.
It should work at any angle but lower might help.
That's a monster of a machine! I can see where production would be fairly high!! I would say to either oil or grease that chain....wouldn't hurt anything!! Stay safe my friend!!
Yes, it is a tank! It is bigger than the camera shows!
Got to love that Eastonmade Axis! Congrats and enjoy it Tony!
Thanks for watching Gord!
Great review guys. Really appreciate the support. I will get tony to check the cylinder for the log lift. There is normally a restrictor in one of the fittings to slow it down. It may have been missed.
@Eastonmade Wood Splitters - any plans to improve the intake on the conveyer? It seems like wood always sits at the bottom of the conveyer and has a hard job getting picked up.
@@jamesbainton really not a whole lot to be done to it. Running it a little quicker with less of an incline does help out a lot.
Good answer Andrew (assuming its you). Some do not seem to recognize that the smooth cleats help to prevent major damage to the conveyor in that a "stuck" piece of wood is far more likely to pop loose with your design if it gets jammed with others than it would be if there were teeth grabbing it. The lower the angle the easier it goes on the conveyor!
@@christophersmith5303 you're right on with that. Really have to consider whats the lesser of the two evils
@@christophersmith5303 makes sense. I guess it looks like the wood is getting stuck on that black sweeper...I was thinking of more of a wider intake that funnels the wood down above that black sweeper so that the wood doesn't have to get pulled off the sweeper.
Awesome video once again. That's a really nice piece of equipment Tony has. Congrats
Thanks for watching Phil, yes it is a good one!
I"m glad you showed the blooper lowering the conveyor. That is a moment where a person could have thrown out there back or could have gotten smoked in the face with an angry winch handle.
Yes, no injuries reported! .....This time!
awesome machine,scary part,wedge comming down,would be afraid to get fingers caught,being use to splitting horizontai vs vertical
Yes, you gotta think all the time!
8 to 12 inch pieces will go right up the elevator. For 16's, lower the elev and/or make the elev trough deeper. It's the teeter-totter effect.- Somebody, during his turn, was splitting pretty big, bigger than Tony's. Really enjoy Tony and his orientations. I have some machines, but they are not "toys". Good tools, to a hard working man, are to be used carefully, and enjoyed. Thanks, both of you.
I am the same way anything I spend my $$$ on is a tool that had better work for me not the other way around.
Tony I just received my Eastonmade 22-28 wood splitter last week. I took your suggestion and coated it with Fluid Film!
Congrats! Now get splittin'!
The rubber flappy thing is something that when I was using a processor was 1 of the banes of my existence. I have come to the conclusion after spending a LOT of hours watching wood not go up a conveyor that there was 2 things that I would try once I got around to trying once I got around to building 1 for personal use. The first is to add some bolts at least twice the height of the scrapers so they either pick up the blocks or at least rotate them and secondly and potentially most importantly is the change the rubber flappy thingy for a broom head angled maybe 20 degrees off being at right angles so that the flicking action as the scraper passes under the shrapnel protector doesn't occur across the whole scraper at the same time. My other alternative thought was to put in 2 rubber flappy things. The lower 1 would be a match for what is on the Axis and it would stop chips getting under the tail drum and a second located about an inch higher than that (in the position that the Axis one is in) and that is of a height that brushes the tops of the scrapers and chain but it doesn't flick at all which is what allows wood to build up.
The processor I used to use would cut anything that would fit through the 20" x 12" aperture. To get wood cut fast I would fill that space with as many sleeper backs (leftovers from railway sleeper production) as possible so that every cut every 8s or so there could be 5 or 6 blocks (about a wheelbarrow load) dropping onto the conveyor. There wasn't much time to get the blocks out of the road before the next lot dropped in.
Okay Al, that sounds like a lot of work!
@@jakebredthauer5100 . There's actually a couple of really bad videos on my channel of the 2 saws I worked on and used nearly 30 years ago. The video is pretty shocking as it's from a VHS-C camcorder recording that was transferred to VHS before being digitised.
Binding was always a bit of a problem but the saw (known as small saw on my videos) had a thicker than usual 3ft circular saw on it direct driver from a 180hp supercharged Nissan diesel. The clamping mechanism was actually multiple stages with a row of springs with spikes right at the front and some 4" spring loaded "tubes" in a couple of rows further back. When the saw was humping it was knocking through a truckload of my little truck in about 20-25 minutes. That's around 7m3 or 2 cords of Aussie hardwood.
Great machine that I cracked the shits with and stopped cutting with due to the conveyor.
I am on the list. Hopefully their production will increase enough I can get it this winter but for now I am still out over a year. I ordered mine without the conveyor as I can get a larger convey to pile wood higher for not much more than haveing the conveyor attached.
Ok so we definitely need to set something up.before and after you get it. I am saving for a Wolfe Ridge but seeing equipment run in person is way better than on video..
That makes good sense to me too, higher piles dry nice too.
Yes, hands on and asking the right questions from people who will tell you the facts and have a honest opinion about the machines is a good thing.
Yeah, that elevator always seems to have an issue with pieces “surfing” over the bars. Can’t wait for my Axis to get here next April.
It does surf.
G’mornin Chris. Wonderful review of a great product. Reminds me of my days when I ran a press brake
Thanks Corey!
I’ve used chain conveyors and belts. The chain conveyor will last longer then a belt but the chain conveyor is noisier then a belt. Lowering the angle is the key to prices surfing over the chain. Vertical splitters push the wood up the conveyor untill the paddles grab it. Peace
Thanks William!
I agree with everything you guys said in here about the axis. There is definitely some room for improvement with the conveyor
Yes, that is the weak spot, otherwise it is a beast of a machine!
@@InTheWoodyard I just ran it today and kicked up the conveyer speed up to about 5 or 6 and that seemed to help clear the logs faster but it really reduces cycle time.
@@HometownAcres Yes, that makes sense!
Do you think it would work better if it was flatter. I was thinking why doesn’t he lower that thing
Thank you for convincing me I need one! Wouldn't lowering the conveyor help alot? That tote is pretty low!
Yup, we did later !!
Thanks for the how-to on setting the machine up. Good knowledge to have in the hopefully very near future. 😎👍
That is great when are you expecting it to come?
I placed my order the same month as Tony...
@@circlebmn Soon then, soon! Where are you at Cliff?
About an hour north of Minneapolis
Nice demonstration, great tutorial.
Thanks Pete!
Tony would make a great father in law
I think so too..
Or brother in law or neighbor or uncle or sister, HA!
Great detailed video Chris of the Eastonmade Axis 👌🏻🔥🇨🇦
Thanks for watching!
Just think your conveyor is at too steep an angle, just move the cage further away and let the conveyor down.
It looks like putting it lower would make it work better, but it should work at a higher angle.
I'm thinking the angle of the bottom is too shallow. I don't know how to describe it. That spanning-part full of bolts that holds the debris flap.
THAT part needs to be more vertical. It's acting like a cup, and is being a place for the base of the wood. The chain-rung thing only clears the flapper BEYOND that cup area. So the base of the wood that is supposed to catch on the rung isn't even getting close.
If that was more vertical, the rung would get to the wood.
Yes, that would probably help a bit.
Mr. Dethmaul! My thoughts exactly.
@@InTheWoodyard
Batta bing!
@@dethmaul BOTTA BOOM!
You guys are a good team ,, a lot of experience right there !
Yes, but just a couple of boys on the inside! HA!
Guys this was so Kool - thank you for the detailed and experience reporting. The lead time today is now 14 months for the Axis. I'm going to watch the last half after dinner! ~ Keith
Thanks for watching!
Conveyor will have an optimal angle depending on the blades, speed, and material being moved. Check with Eastonmade to make sure.
Yup.
I noticed that Adam from Hometown Acres has the same problem with his splitter. It might be a design flaw or you just need to lower the elevator down to reduce the angle. Good demo, thanks.
Yes, maybe so, thanks George!
Just a thought...before lowering the conveyor, if it's long enough, could the winch strap be flipped backwards (over the log stripper plates and behind the ram) to use the winch for safely foolin' with the log lifter? It looks like the hole in the lifter side plate is big enough for the hook. A factory welded on guide ring somewhere on the top of the vertical frame, big enough for the hook to fit through, for an up and over use of the strap wouldn't be a bad idea either. Ring could also be used to lift the entire unit with an excavator or bucket if needed. (I know, I know...it's got fork tubes! lol.)
But ya never know when another option might be handy or needed. Been operating equipment big and small from half ton to 30 ton for 55 of my 68 yrs... experience says options matter.
Also a welded on bracket to pin the lifter upright (using the existing hole in it's side plate.)
I'd be real tempted to try scrapping that debris guard too. It's a nice idea but "it ain't helpin'!" Maybe there's more to it than I know but it seems whatever debris made it down through there would just pile up underneath....dunno.....maybe just a center piece of sweep to keep chips out of the chain sprocket
Best demo vid yet...good work men!
Ya listenin' Andrew Eastonmmade?
Maybe so!!
Can it be configured so the conveyer is on the right and lift table on left. Conveyer is set to high. Is my guess why it’s not taking the wood up. How many ton is it ? What is the cycle time ? I think I’d still like the ultra.
14 ton, I believe.
I doubt that it would be factory changed, but you might be able to.
Looks like lowering the angle has been mentioned. As a professional viewer of wood cutting videos, the other thing I noticed was, the max height needed to be raised another inch or so. It looked like the amount of time saved with a shorter stroke was used up by fiddling with wood that didn't slip right under the wedge. I'll be looking for another video in the future, once you guys get some more practice on this machine. It looks like a great machine.
I agree, more time on the job is going to help a lot!
Great machine, maybe lower the conveyor to lesser angle. Waiting to see which new machine you will get, not trying to spend your money. Have a Safe Day
We will see, thanks for watching!
Chris you will be wanting 1 of the axis now since you got to run one. Nice wood splitter. Have a great day be safe.
I wanted one before I ran it! Now I really want one!
@@InTheWoodyard I hear you.
AFTER only the first 20 seconds of your video: you bring a smile to my face :-)
Thanks so much for watching Susan!
Eastonmade still needs to put a chute on the end of that little conveyor. That would make it much easier to use when loading bins and trailers and a bit more intuitive to run the conveyor at less of an angle.
I do like watching the axis work through some big chunks of yard tree wood.
It does make big ones small fast!
I have trouble bucking flat sided rounds sometimes. And if that round is cockeyed to start it probably could squirt out and getcha.
Yes they can do that!
The intro music and sequence was really neat! Got a moisture meter, brand name is General, and it seems to work really well. Moisture of the Ash I bucked yesterday was 17-21%, and the oak stringers was 20% about 1/2in from the outside edge, 35% in the middle. How long do you think it will take the oak at 35% to dry down to 20%? Would be a great video for you to do on different wood with initial moisture and how long to normally dry it down to 20% in the open with good sun. The Axis is a really sweet splitter. Not sure if want to go that route or with a Wolfe Ridge. Can't beat the working table of the Axis, plus the conveyor can help you load the trailer and you can go store the wood anywhere in the woodyard. Seems to me that splitting with the Axis and conveyor into a trailer so you can keep the same wood in one spot in the woodyard instead of scattered about.
At least a year on the oak, depending on your drying process. Yes, the logistics of the wood yard is a real ongoing challenge.
The opening was so dramatic I know I liked it so did a few other too..
Good overall review, I think its one of the best I have seen so far on this piece of equipment..
Thanks Daniel!
As others have stated, the angle of the conveyor was far too steep. The Axis really seems to shine when you cut through multiple splits at the same time. It has plenty of power to do this and it makes the operation more efficient if you can make bigger splits holding even quartered sections together so that you can split it in 4 presses of the pedal instead of 8.
It is a very nice machine. Total overkill for a guy cutting firewood for himself but more power to Tony for buying one! You would do really well with this and it would certainly up your production. The most attractive thing about the Axis for me and the reason I have considered it is that it really saves your back. I very much like the large workbench with the lift so there is no bending over!
One question - given your log supplier and the smaller diameter logs you get from him, would you get more wood if you took the big stuff vs the small stuff and what would the pricing difference be? I know your brother seems to get stuff that is much bigger but sounds like it's raining wood where he is at. You could definitely handle that stuff with an Axis pretty easily, but what would the economics be if you got a log truck of the bigger stuff vs the smaller pieces?
Usually no price difference for me, but yes you do get a lot of wood from the big logs for sure. What I have found though is the huge amount of work and time needed to work them down in size is the killer for me.
The bark and smaller tree pieces should be saved into 5 gallon bucket’s to start fires with or simply burn in your outdoor boiler. Waste nothing and you will want nothing. A buddy of mine heats his house and shop with an outdoor boiler and literally being out in the boonies, his nearest neighbor is 38 miles away he burns his trash and once a year loads up his 1 ton dump truck and hauls all the scrap metal cans and other items that are steel based. He said his last trip paid him just over $30.00.
Food for thought
I do not have time to save or spend on scraps, if I had a boiler on sight then yes tossing it in would be nice!
I didn’t think that looked like your wood yard when you pulled it out of the barn. Nice machine. Gerry with a G delivered the Ultra to me.
Yup all of the Eastonmade stuff is well made!
nice spliter all you do with the outfeed chain is put some oil on the rollers we use the same chain in our sawmill
Thanks for the tips!
What benefit does that conveyor give over just setting the tote nearer and throwing the logs in directly? It seems like the same amount of work to put them on the conveyor.
It was the first use and most of the time now Tony uses his trailer to fill the splits with!
Good to see got the price out of the 12/22 what he paid for they definitely cost more now in the beginning of 2023 here. If you lower the conveyor a little more it probably take the wood up better but the did a up grade on the paddles on the chain GOOD CHOICE 👍👍👍
Thanks Joe.
This type of spliter has been popular in the uk for many years.and i have used them frequently. My only compaint is that the side tables are to narrow and would be better if they enveloped the user more .everything seems a little tight big rounds once split have nowhere to go .i hope you get to read this.
Thanks for the info Simon, that is good to know! I read and respond to as many comments as I can everyday! Thanks for watching!
Ya fooled me. I thought it was your at first. Take care friend 👍🇺🇸
I wish! Thanks for watching Gary!
They have the same problem on all of Andrew's videos with the wood not feeding on the conveyor, he let's it pile up and eventually it all just grabs and goes. I've noticed other companies the build wood conveyors notch teeth into their cleats to catch the surface of the wood better and even turn the cleats over so the open section on the bottom works as a tooth instead of the smooth top side. Heck just try flipping the chian over and using it that way.
Yes, for an easy fix we just put a block in the front/bottom and it helps the split wood get grabbed and it goes up! Thanks for watching Ed!
I have installed, tuned up, and repaired hundreds of conveyors in different applications. I would remove that silly rubber wiper thing and try running without it. What little wood debris falls through won't hurt anything but you can then adjust or remount it if you want to.
Yup, I agree with you on that!
For efficiency I have seen others keep the round (or portion of a round) together during the split. Do slice, slice, slice in one direction then rotate the entire round 90 degrees then slice, slice, slice in the other direction and in that (ideal) case you can have 16 pieces of wood with 6 strokes of the wedge. (EDIT...I see that you were doing this with the smaller rounds) Also, looks like the conveyor might catch the wood better if the incline was not as steep.
Yup!
This is my pet peeve with Easton Mades conveyor. The bar that takes the wood has round edges and doesn’t grab the wood properly. I think that bar should have teeth so it solves that problem. If I were you I would place your order now so you can get an Axis and make your life so much easier.
Eastonmade should design and offer a couple of "clean-out cleats" to put on the conveyor. So that a couple of times during the rotation of the chain, the cleats might get a better bite on anything hanging up.
They are real beasts!
That might help!
The conveyor issue could be a matter of just throwing the split pieces a little further up the conveyor. Alternatively, you could lower the angle of the conveyor so the split piece isn't fighting gravity as much.
Those are both good options, but it should work.
Hey Chris, with the large volume of wood you process , this machine would pay for itself in no-time. Very little to none, kindling pieces , means more wood sold and would greatly reduce the hundreds of wheelbarrow loads you now take to your low spot in the back of your yard. On those brutal hot days you could split and barely break a sweat , well maybe , seems like much less effort Have a good day
May be so, but for $3500 vs $11,000 maybe not?
I've been considering one of these for the last month or so, but damn............the price has damn-near doubled on it in the last year. Tony was saying that the cost when he got his (which I assume was a year ago, or thereabouts, since that's how old the video is), the cost was 7K for the Axis without the conveyer, plus 4K for the conveyer. If you look on Eastonmade's site now, it's 13K without the conveyer!!! Man oh man, I know everything is more now with inflation, but almost double???
Yup, the costs for materials has gone up by 2-3 times...I am not surprised.
You need a flow control valve on the input to the table raising. What this does is limit the volume( speed) of hydraulic oil but not the pressure(power) to the cylinder. slower but more control. Safety, safety, safety.
pipe it after the control lever. Very cheap at princess auto or tsc or harbour freight (20.00). They have an adjustment screw to fine tune the volume, just like the conveyor system only smaller and permanent adjustment unless you use tools.
Yup, call Eastonmade and tell them, they made it.
Heck with the splitter, I need a woodyard!
Yes! The Woodyard is like heaven on earth!!!!
Great splitter that is easy too make nice size fire wood all the time . 👍
IT is a beast!
Go have a look at a Mahoe Splitter made over here in NZ, they are a beast. They put bearings in the table so easy to move the rings around.
That is a great idea for the table! Thanks Andrew!
Good high quality machine but my bug bear would be that the conveyor doesn't pick the split wood up very well at steep angles. A lot of time lost getting the paddles to carry it away from the work area.🤔
Yes it needs to be adjusted better to move the pieces away.
Easton made makes great equipment .The problem i had is when i called them about a unit, i was told a 18 month or longer wait that is just a long time for a person running a business!
Yes, that is an issue right now, hopefully that changes!
Regarding the log lift reattaching to the pin after transportation, did you try letting the table go to the ground and adjusting the hydraulics til they line up?
I am not sure that was needed, it was done before I got there.
Absolutely phenomenal review. Is there anything on the motor for your conveyor that indicates what size the motor is by chance? I'm working on a design for a conveyor for my splitter I already built but i can't seem to find a whole lot of info on what size hydraulic motor anyone uses on their conveyors. I'd be buying new so just want to size it properly from the get-go. Any help would be appreciated.
Not sure, but I think the motor is a 11-12 hp ish.
Those metal bars on the conveyor that push the wood chunks are called "cleats."
Yup.
That is. Serious machine, but to lower the conveyer belt would help a lot
yes and yes!
Any update on what was wrong with the conveyor belt system?
The flap blocks the wood from getting hooked on the paddles so it needed to be adjusted in further is all.
Thats a beautiful machine. Thanks for the info
You bet! Thanks for watching!
That was a great video! And now I want one maybe if I order one now I can have it paid off by the time it shows up : ) Thanks for sharing.
Yes, order now!
That maple looked like “premium firewood “ to me!
Some was but a lot of it was a bit punky!
Good morning Chris!! 😀😀
I just love the Axis. Just because of being able to stand up straight and split with it.
A while back Andrew did a demo of one with a longer splitter blade on it and was wondering if maybe he should make that change to it.
From what I have seen I think the blade could be another 4 to 6 inches longer and it would work better with the larger rounds. But I haven't ran one yet. What do you guys think?
Take care my friends!!😀😀👍👍
Logger Al
You might be right, the only way to know as you know, is real world working with it, the bugs always come out! Have a good one!
@@InTheWoodyard I'm considering spending the time it takes to convert my Troybuilt into something comparable if I can find the time. I'm going to get together with Tony one of these days and take a look at it just to use it for a reference . I think for just a bunch of hours and a few hundred dollars worth of metal and hydraulic hoses I can make one fairly close to the base machine.
@@aldredske6197 maybe so!
Morning Chris and Tony the Toy Guy!
Tool guy not toy guy, tools! Thanks Terrence!
@@InTheWoodyard They're toys to him. LOL!
@@terrencewalker2108 Yes you could say that!
Great machines. The conveyor is too steep in that the edge if the wood rides on the rubber guard and not on the next chain dawg.
You are correct!
Tony should post his Axis review on the Eastonmande website. Very thorough. That being said, there is no way the Axis holds a candle to the 12-22 for any application other than if a person were primarily interested in selling bundle wood. Much slower and way more handling of every round. I predict Tony will miss the 12-22 after the novelty of the Axis wears off.....unless selling bundle wood if a bid part of his future. the 12-22 is a brute and best-in-class by a wide margin.
He does plan on selling bundle wood.
The conveyor bars need some small teeth welded on them, if there is clearance room for them. If I remember correctly the prototype of this machine had bars with teeth. For some reason they removed them for the production model. Probably because of lawyers.
Maybe so!
Great splitter. I want one!
Then make it happen!
Chris, If I had your money I'd would be getting one on order for the wood yard ,you could easily sell the one your using now. Differently a work horse splitter GNI
Dave if you had my money you would be in a soup line and sleeping under cardboard on the street! Ha!
Keep it Real! Love it! Run Away Ramp! Great work Chris, Your A video Filming Pro! 🚜🪵👍🏼🇱🇷
Ha, ya, it was an exciting shoot!
Coming from a construction and heavy equipment back ground, I’m curious how they get away from having any type of guarding for personnel protection on the return for the conveyor? It seems like if you used this in a commercial application osha would have something to say about that.
osha is one of the nastiest four letter words.
@@InTheWoodyard sure guy🙄
Thinking your convayor is set to steep have it set at lower angle so it works less and sets bit more flatter just an idea from my experience with convayor systems
We tried that too, same results.
I just wanna know where I can get those arm sleeve protectors :) .. I cant find them anywhere
you can get them on Amazon... they are called Arm Chaps $65
I've seen these splitters before they are definitely a good wood processer.
Yes they are a big mean machine for sure!
Does Tony have a UA-cam Channel ?? He certainly has a great knowledge and lots of good stuff ! Tony and your brothers certainly have been great added segments to your Channel , don’t know what the viewership numbers are for these segments? Good Stuff Chris !
Yes, they all add a lot to the channel for sure!
Would the axis produce more wood then the Easton you have now on the hourly base
They are both Eastonmade products but I think it would be close between the Ultra and the AXIS.
Very nice machine! I'm surprised they used a Briggs for the engine.
Yes it is, they can't get Hondas anymore!
@@InTheWoodyard that's crazy!
I had an Eastonmade on order when they switched to Briggs. I cancelled the order.It was a bait and switch situation and they were not very upstanding. Too bad.