So this old splitter turned out much better than I was even hoping, I must say. It's stronger, faster, and 100% easy to split wood now. And no fooling around with an old gas engine or carburetor. Don't forget to hit that like button, and have an awesome weekend everybody!
Great job with the welding. One recommendation, when you're welding around a corner, make sure you always carry the weld in one pass as you wrap it around the corner. If you're going to run out of rod when you get to the corner it's better to stop an inch or two early so you can make one continuous weld around the corner. This will help prevent cracks forming in the corners down the line. Cracks LOVE corners. Also, pick up some 6010 but I don't think your Vevor stick welder can't sustain high enough voltage for the 6010 so I would get some 6013 to do your root passes. Do 2 root passes with 6010/6013 then cap it with 7018. P.S. I play all your videos at 2x playback speed! 🤣
i am not a welder. something that i just recently started doing is cleaning the tip of the rod off by banging it on the concrete before i strike an arc, and it seems to have worked.
Tip for striking an arc: strike it like you would a long match, you don't have to start where you want your weld to start. Strike it so you produce some friction and carefully drag the arc to where you need it.
Log splitter looks great. You need a cage around the cylinder etc as you are using the tool to manipulate the log stack. I would also strengthen the attachment point as you are swinging the thing around. Otherwise what a great tool. If I had an excavator I would want one !!
I would add that many welding machines have hot start function, when initial current is like 20% higher for like 0.5s (time and percentage may or may not be tunable) which helps with igniting the arc a lot.
Yes, and when you're reigniting, swing the rod like the head of a hammer just hard enoug so that the tip bounces of the workpiece enough to not stick, and not so hard that you chip off a large section of the flux. This obviously takes some practice.
Hi, 7018 rods form a glass like cap over the end of the rod if you stop. Scratching this off of the rod (on the concrete floor) really helps when restarting an arc.
I’m 67 yr old retired welder/fabricator. We used 7018 on just about every project In pressurized vessels. We took our rods out of a hot box. Sometimes we would stick the rod on purpose and count to 5 to warm the rod. We also had a small piece of metal we would tap the rod on it to break off the flux coating on the tip of the rod. Then stick it on the weld area as if it were a match stick. Great projects you have !
Love the channel John! When using a hole saw in the mill, don't use the pilot drill. The mill is rigid enough to not need it. Then you end up with a nice round blank to use elsewhere on another unforeseen projects later. I have box fulls of these of various sizes and they always come in handy.
To help with starting the arc: strike it against the material like a match, then pull away and settle into where you want the weld to start. It takes practice but you'll never go back once you figure out how to do it. You can pull back a surprising distance while you reposition without losing the arc. Also, when using a new rod it helps to use one hand holding directly onto the rod (😂) near the weld to stabilize it. (I tried to get that without my mind going into the gutter and I failed miserably)
And he’s gotta turn them amps up. That’s some thick stuff I’d have it set to 150 at least if not 180 to make sure it’s melted in there, make starting easier, and make the whole thing faster. Although 180’s probably too high I generally don’t stick stuff that thick and it’s been a long time
they have those already, this though, havent seen this version yet although some skid steer people have something similar to this but its quirky and weird, this is simple and straight forward@@AtaQuitMalik
@@brucehurlburt7740those processor attachments are sweet but cost a fortune! I’ve had discussions w my excavator buddy about a simpler solution like this for his smaller machine, it’s great to see this
You can use the carcass of the old splitter to build yourself a conveyor (or hopper) system to load wood into the furnace. You made the splitting easy, now make the burning easy.
Rotate the Beam 45 Degrees so when you are welding, you can weld in the flat position instead of the horizontal position.always try to move the piece you are welding to the easiest welding position if all possible. I run 1/8" 7018 rods at 90 to 120 amps, normally about 110 amps. pulling the rod makes the puddle bigger, but can splatter more, pushing the rod makes the weld bead smaller, but lays down smoother.
More amps also means easier to start/maintain the arc. Also if you’re sticking the rod real bad check your ground. Edit: I really struggle with 7018 making a glass bead on the end on restarts I’ll generally beat it against something that is not grounded to knock that glass head off. Generally I’m running 6010/12/13 for work like this.
Great video! I think your next step might be to weld a hitch receiver to your excavator blade then build a small dump trailer to haul the wood in. The engine, pump, wheels and maybe even axle and cylinder from the old splitter might even be reused to build the dump trailer.
This is my all-time fav project that you've done so far! I love to watch wood being split. Somehow, it is very satisfying to me. Also, I love metal working. I love it when metal it melted, cut, drilled, welded, etc. This was an excellent project idea! Great job!
Jon; We've been watching your UA-cam channel, off and on, for about a year. Your innovative way of fixing or building what you need, and how you explain it, is very interesting to watch, even for me, who knows next to nothing about machinery. It's fun to learn new stuff, whether you'll ever do it yourself or not. Today, we watched how you created a new log splitter that you can use with your excavator. We were amazed! I missed the first part where you may have explained what you were going to do, so it was a great surprise to see that you designed it to split UPSIDE DOWN, so you grab and split the log w/o having to PICK it up!! We always have a LOT of logs to split since we have a lot of oak wilt. Your innovation would make our 2.5-3.5ft wide logs a snap. Holly Minnesota
The refurbished wood splitter was a great idea, love what you did to adapt it to the mini ex. Makes splitting wood a lot less stress on the back . Probably one of the best ideas I've seen in awhile.
That’s seriously impressive - to come up with that design, starting from a flawed Harbour Freight design, and execute it so well is remarkable. Well done, sir. 😊
Just wanted to say for anyone new to stick welding a 7024 welding rod is probably the easiest rod to learn on, you literally can rest it on the material and let it burn. Try it you will be amazed
Works excellent!! One thing you might want to add on in the future is a guard that slides with the bed plate on the end of the cylinder that covers the rod. When the cylinder is fully retracted the guard would not really do much and it would just slide across the body of the cylinder, but when the cylinder was at full extension it would protect the chrome on the rod from accidentally being banged down on a log or a rock. Once again, excellent video! Also, to save from having to handle the wood twice maybe you could grab it with the excavator and split it right into a dump trailer!
With the power that seems to have you could probably bolt a 4way splitter onto it and save even more time. I always liked when the wedge was part that moved and the flat stop was stationary so the log didn't move around as much (like you were saying with the way the logs fell off the old splitter). Great job as always!
To everyone saying to add wings to the wedge to make it split multiple ways: There are two reasons that is done on conventional splitters. 1) speed. 2) to reduce the amount of lifting. This attachment makes the second point moot, so let’s look at point 1. Your logs have to be small enough that the intersection of the + is near the middle, and your splitter has to be stout enough to handle the increased splitting force. The latter has been an issue here which is how the OEM splitter became trashed, so it is a really bad idea to make any change that increases splitting force. Also, perhaps it was missed that he doesn’t need wood as small as would come off a four way split attachment. With a conventional splitter you can just lift the 4way accessory off the wedge when a 2 way split is desired, but here you’d have to climb out of the rig to do it. Finally, with a conventional splitter, gravity holds the attachment in place, but here it would have to lock in place…so wood could wedge between the horizontal wedges and the I beam. This splitter has converted a difficult task into something that is effortless, almost fun, and very fast, all things considered. If he were selling the firewood then time is money. In this case , though, the splitting has been reduced to a small fraction of the total time and effort needed to produce the firewood. (Starting with felling the tree, and ending with hauling it to the furnace and feeding the fire). If speeding up the splitting reduces reliability or lifespan of the splitter, then it is not a win.
Since you are splitting such huge diameters, I would re-attach the blade extension. Also add some “flaring wings” on the back of the splitting wedge. It will help pry apart the stringy woods. Great idea and realization of a dream. Way to go. 👍👍
But man, that canon series... good stuff! That was when I found the channel, when all the fabrication channels were doing the Civil War Canon Challenge. John entered and taught me more in those 5-6 videos than most other channels could do in a year. So practical, but still so personable. I really feel like I'm hanging with the farmers and tradespeople I grew up around. I still think he could have sleeved the canon and fired a ping-pong-ball out of it or something... I am just like... DUDE, come on! I bet we could get him to revisit it if we all went to Patreon and asked him to! 😁
Tip: when stick welding you want to strike your arc like you’re striking a match on a match box only you want to barely touch the metal. The trick is to keep the rod moving at and at the same distance as the rod dissipates. Strike fast but with a very light touch.
He’s 1000% correct. If you look at your video you’re jabbing that rod into the weld zone, so when it fires up, it’s bearing self and sticking. Don’t be afraid to bend that rod in your holder to get a comfortable angle
after splitting and stacking wood for my parents for several years i can appreciate your desire to make an attachment out of one. i love it! wish my dad would have had that!!!
Jon, That has got to be one of your most ingenious builds! Not only did you reuse almost all of the materials, but you made it work soooo much better! Please Thank The Cameralady for us. She always takes good video. did you let her do some splitting? I know I would have aksed to. BTW, obviously you can use it to stack the wood also, so the next upgrade should be to attach a chainsaw to it! Thanks!
What a great idea! After watching the functionality of this attachment, I thought it might be handy to use the old parts of the log splitter to make a mobile conveyer to load the dump truck or trailer with processed wood. Could make your last splits over top of the conveyer and save a step in moving the wood later.
Love it! My only comment is since you are picking up the logs to split them, why not just split them into a trailer so you don't have to come back a second time?
Two thoughts. One, weld the cutoff splitting wedge to the end of the other in a tee shape. Maybe it would split two ways then or maybe the logs wouldn’t divide in half as well. Not sure if this would be better or not. Second idea. If you build protection around the hydraulic cylinder, incorporate a stand into the design so when you disconnect, it remains in a position that is easy to store and reconnect to the excavator. Nice little project that I’m sure you followers will enjoy. Let’s get together sometime soon. I would love to bounce some ideas off you. 😊
Admittedly it's not the first time I've seen this type of excavator attachment, but I really like how you were able to repurpose an existing log splitter. This is still a really smart idea- You can split the logs and also use the splitter as a sort of claw to pick them up. If you had a trailer hitch on your excavator, you could also bring a trailer along with you to the split site, and then load up the split wood.
For the type of split wood youre after I think this was a great repurposing of the log splitter. Turned out great And I think the best part about this is no more back breaking work.
Wow that implement is extremely satisfying to watch. One of those tools that makes a task so much easier that at the end of it you almost wish you had more to do but only for a second. Nice work John!!
Haven't read all the comments so maybe someone else mentioned this. Only advice I have (Was a pipe welder until a back injury made me change professions), When welding with 7018, better to push the rod than pull it. Keeps your slag from getting into the weld. Otherwise great job and this is right up my alley for a fun project. Appreciate you sharing it with us.
Beauty of the system also is that you can pick those logs up and put them right in the trailer with your splitter before you split them or after or while you’re splitting. What a great system. Super job. Thanks for sharing.
Outdoors with the Morgan’s demonstrated a very similar device manufactured by Spit Fire that sells for about $2600.00. Mike’s comments were exactly the same of how it took the work out of splitting wood. He mainly breaks down big rounds to save his back but you could use it totally as a log splitter. He also mentioned some tricks that he discovered about how to position the rounds before splitting and not split them totally until you get the wood located where you want it to fall. You could even split wood into a trailer and never have to pick anything up. Now you’re only limitation for size is the length of your chain saw bar. This is definitely a game changer! Great job as always!!
Oh yeah! Amazing work! The splitter works so fast. Perhaps worth it to make a sleeve that does 4-way splits? Andrew Camarata made one for his splitter a while back, and it should be no trouble for you to just strap it on top of the current splitting end. Bravo!
I'm not sure how I stumble in here, but I must say I am impressed! At first I was feeling bad for the log splitter and thinking, replace the beam and get you a Predator engine from Harbor Freight, or heck I'll take it! lol I guessed a few hundred which is a great deal. A split fire excavator splitter is about $1200 plus another $300 for the attachment to the machine. Those logs are just too big to handle with a regular splitter even with a log lift. On a side note. I built a quick attach set of forks for my tractor a few years ago. I have a Lincoln 180 and although the material I was welding I ground 1" steel bar almost to a point and preheated it and the little Lincoln did a heck of a job! I haven't broken them yet. A stick welder is nice for thick and dirty steel. I think I'm going to come back from time to time and check on you! Great job!
This is my absolute favorite kind of project. Where you cut an order of magnitude off of future work. Log splitting becomes an: "Oh yeah, gotta do that while I'm out feeding the chickens this morning" kind of job instead of a "oh yeah, I need to dedicate this weekend to that" kind of job.
When you stop welding, halfway through, with a 70xx rod, a silica bb pools and cools on the end of the electrode. It is dielectric and can make restarts very difficult. You can use a file to clean off the bb. I usually just aggressively poke the end of the rod into the work piece to get it off. I then restrike the ark. Hope this helps 👍
I do the same, or tap the tip of the rod with the flat side of a chipping hammer, most times it breaks off the same way slag breaks of the weld. Be carfull tho cause some times, you'll knock off some of the flux and ruin the rod or make it harder to restart. Pratice and time is key to burning rods. Cleaner weldments goes a long way with 70xx too. Great job, great build.
That is hella cool - I wonder if you could use that for demolition of something?? It might also be useful to add a "finger" or long flange coming perpendicular off the "top" of the splitting wedge, towards the excavator? Then you could use it to more easily roll logs around, like using the thumb. Or what if the splitting wedge had a "+" shape, you could split into 4 pieces at once?
A 3/16 7014 rod would have been perfect for this. You can strike the arc easily and just lay it in the gap and let it do all the work. They are often used for structural steel welding.
I think the most important thing for me is to assume a comfortable welding position. That sounds simple but if your fighting to reach the weld or to smoothly move your arm you are a step behind performing a good weld. Steve😊
Depending on your rod (60xx vs 70xx for example) if you have troubles doing a restart, keep a sanding disc of like 36 grit right by you. Scratch the tip on it. It'll get flux build up so thick it won't arc start.
Great job! Yeah, definitely a guard for the cylinder, as you hit it several times while cutting those last big logs. One dent in the cylinder way and it's done. And a little grease on the sliding rails.
I use to say that I could probably tie your shoes with the loader I ran and got real familiar with, a Volvo and through the years I’ve yet to operate a machine that can replicate the hydraulic performance or surpass the speed of a Volvo and that especially would be Caterpillar included.Enough about my ability, I am So jealous of the setup that You have going on!! From the Splitter to the wood burner from hell.The idea of throwing close to a ton of wood into it at a single feed just amazes me and I can see it lasting two or more days during the fall if fully loaded plus the water pumps transferring the hot water throughout the radiant heated floors and water heater just baffles me. I’ve got radiant heat in my ceilings that when installed electricity wasn’t a overrated commodity and wasting the energy wasn’t thought of like today,new terminology (efficiency) came into play so in the floor makes a lot more sense. My wood burner is efficient but it’s capacity is maybe 110lbs and that can last usually 4 to 5 hours, so Yes understandingly I’m sad for myself and stoked for You, great job on making do with and getting every btu out of all them chunks of wood 🪵 Hoorah !!!
Great content as always. Definitely appreciate your sense of humour.. Advantage of using the excavator is that you can make your final cut over a trailer/dump truck and not have to manually load anything. Working and clearing the job site in one go, what could be more efficient. You do need to build a holding frame for it now, so that you can store it off the ground and orient it to easily connect it to the excavator when needed. Conveyor belt idea sounds good, especially when put at the bottom of a hopper filled with logs, and the controls connected to a remote control, feed the logs automatically when needed....the possibilities for further automation here are intriguing, have the boiler feed itself.........
what a great idea! One thing i notice is that when you're splitting those big logs, the action of the cylinder is putting pressure on the mini ex turntable (trying to spin the excavator sideways). If you put the cutting edge on the cylinder side, the force of splitting the wood would move the log, rather than rotate the excavator platform, and will save a TON of wear and tear on the turntable. Just a thought!
I have the log splitter attachment from Quick Attach for my CTL and its great, but I think yours is a better attachment, you can angle the cut, better vision, awesome job 👍🏻
I think a set of legs on the piston end so you can put it on the ground easier would be a nice addition. Just slightly higher/lower than the piston slider.
Brilliant idea on your part. And even better execution. Those logs looked like butter. It took about 10-15 seconds per split when including line up time. Only about 5 seconds to cut through. Unbelievable.
As soon as I realized what you were doing, I knew this was going to be awesome! That had me smiling for ya! I know how hard of work splitting is, it's fun for some reason but tiring. Picking up the logs or moving them to be split again is the worst part. Man that was so cool! I foresee a bunch of copycats coming! Surprised I hadn't seen this yet. Good Job John! Thanks for another video! I look forward to them
You have always amazed me with the versatility of your skills and innovative solutions to a wide range of problems, but the log splitter transformation project has taken things to a higher level. I find myself at a loss for words that adequately expresses how impressive this project is. Let me just say, you da man bro!!
Nice Video as always👍the sticking could be caused by wet/moist electrodes. We had one pack that got a little bit of rain into it and they were sticking crazy too. My dad told me that too, that wet electrodes are sticking
One of the best Channels on UA-cam. You earn a lot more Subscribers. The Video, Cut and the explains are on a really high level. Thank you for entertaining us! 👍
That turned out awesome! Now I need one when I get an excavator! As for the old frame and guts, maybe use it as a hydraulic power pack for rescuing old machines that don't run. You could hook this in and operate their hydraulic functions with it.
Now that goes through the logs like the proverbial hot knife... Congratulations for the epic win idea and execution. I am truly impressed. Definitely money well spent
Great job John and what a massive difference between the original splitter to your uprated one you can use on your excavator. Awesome Farm engineering and $250 is nothing compared to what you would pay for an off the shelf log splitter to run off your excavator 😀👍
You do a lot of metal work that needs to be painted. Have you ever thought of making a powdercoating setup with some type of oven (outdoor?) and spraybooth?
I skipped this video for a couple of weeks, because I thought it would be boring... how wrong I was. That thing is a beast once you start attacking the logs. Always great and entertaining content to watch on the weekend. Thanks
That worked better than I expected! Another idea that came to mind is to put a hydraulic motor on the business end with one of those murder screws that people used to put on the PTO of tractors for splitting wood, then swing it like a rock hammer and just drill the logs apart. The hydraulic motor would probably cost as much as your excavator if you’d buy it new though, but it’s the only excavator mounted log splitter that I can think of that would be faster than your contraption!
Many plasma cutters do actually have a gouging mode. Usually along with special gouging tips. Doesn't work as well as carbon arc gouger but it can be very useful if it's what's available.
Absolutely astonishing work!!! That woodcutter style could even be put on the market at your Store!!! Maybe you could start manufacturing them !!! Don’t forget to put a Patent on it!!! Great content John !!! HOMERUN on this one !!!
I've welded thousands of pounds of 7018, it's still my favorite stick rod, so don't give up on it. Tack a scrap of steel just off the end of your start and scratch your rod on that. Angle the rod backwards about 45 degrees and drag it to light it up. Once you get it to where the bead begins you can angle it up to 80 or 90 deg to get more penetration. If it won't light easily turn the amps up, for 1/8 about 125 max DC Reverse. Don't weave, just drag it along the joint slowly enough so the bead cross section is convex shaped the way you want. Watch the puddle, not the arc. I often position my head so the rod tip obscures most of the arc so I can see the puddle better. Wrap the ground cable around the work piece to counteract any magnetic arc blow. Direct the rod more towards the vertical side to make an even filet. Practice a few beads on scraps to get the drag speed right. The slag should curl up and come off easily. Make sure you clean off all rust and mill scale for attractive welds. A litle pre-heat also will insure there's no moisture in the joint. For an easier rod to start out with try 7014, less amps required and a pretty blue bead. If these tips don't help you will need a better welding machine.
I love it! way better design then the one I have that has a wedge that attaches to the thumb and had a backstop that replaces the bucket. I also commend you for being so humble, to many people on here are real A-holes when it comes to welding or machining... great job! keep it up!!
Very clever, simple and well made. I never thought about this splitter could ever been use with an excavator but now I do. I'm glad that you bought the big makita grinder, as I and others adviced you to get one. Thanks for sharing your time with us. Keep up the good work and take care!
I think you should use the "gripper capability" more, like gripping a log and splitting it on top of a trailer. Also in retrospect I'd be thinking about doing the mount asymmetrically so that the gripped log is centered to the stick. Probably not much of a difference but it might feel more naturally. And you could incorporate the thump to grip stuff in two dimensions (given enough circuits on the hydros)
CAD aka Cardboard Advance Design has always been a tried and true farm method. Grandpa taught me stick welding along with that form of CAD back in my youth on the farm. ❤
So this old splitter turned out much better than I was even hoping, I must say. It's stronger, faster, and 100% easy to split wood now. And no fooling around with an old gas engine or carburetor. Don't forget to hit that like button, and have an awesome weekend everybody!
Great job with the welding.
One recommendation, when you're welding around a corner, make sure you always carry the weld in one pass as you wrap it around the corner. If you're going to run out of rod when you get to the corner it's better to stop an inch or two early so you can make one continuous weld around the corner. This will help prevent cracks forming in the corners down the line. Cracks LOVE corners.
Also, pick up some 6010 but I don't think your Vevor stick welder can't sustain high enough voltage for the 6010 so I would get some 6013 to do your root passes. Do 2 root passes with 6010/6013 then cap it with 7018.
P.S. I play all your videos at 2x playback speed! 🤣
I feel like if you put bigger hoses on that piston you could split even faster
1:09:48 This has to be one of your best post thus far. ******** 8 stars.
Your best build with the least amount of whoopsies yet. Makes me want to get and learn stick welding.
i am not a welder. something that i just recently started doing is cleaning the tip of the rod off by banging it on the concrete before i strike an arc, and it seems to have worked.
Tip for striking an arc: strike it like you would a long match, you don't have to start where you want your weld to start. Strike it so you produce some friction and carefully drag the arc to where you need it.
Log splitter looks great. You need a cage around the cylinder etc as you are using the tool to manipulate the log stack. I would also strengthen the attachment point as you are swinging the thing around. Otherwise what a great tool. If I had an excavator I would want one !!
@@nigeltisdalei think you mistakenly posted this as a reply?
I would add that many welding machines have hot start function, when initial current is like 20% higher for like 0.5s (time and percentage may or may not be tunable) which helps with igniting the arc a lot.
Yes, and when you're reigniting, swing the rod like the head of a hammer just hard enoug so that the tip bounces of the workpiece enough to not stick, and not so hard that you chip off a large section of the flux. This obviously takes some practice.
Hi, 7018 rods form a glass like cap over the end of the rod if you stop. Scratching this off of the rod (on the concrete floor) really helps when restarting an arc.
Out of all the log splitting channels I've watched, this is the most ingenious thing I've ever seen
Really?
How many tractor mounted log splitters have you seen?
I know there are many videos of identical splitters on UA-cam.
Look up a cone splitter for excavator they are the tool to have
I’m 67 yr old retired welder/fabricator. We used 7018 on just about every project In pressurized vessels. We took our rods out of a hot box. Sometimes we would stick the rod on purpose and count to 5 to warm the rod. We also had a small piece of metal we would tap the rod on it to break off the flux coating on the tip of the rod. Then stick it on the weld area as if it were a match stick. Great projects you have !
Love the channel John! When using a hole saw in the mill, don't use the pilot drill. The mill is rigid enough to not need it. Then you end up with a nice round blank to use elsewhere on another unforeseen projects later. I have box fulls of these of various sizes and they always come in handy.
👌
To help with starting the arc: strike it against the material like a match, then pull away and settle into where you want the weld to start. It takes practice but you'll never go back once you figure out how to do it. You can pull back a surprising distance while you reposition without losing the arc. Also, when using a new rod it helps to use one hand holding directly onto the rod (😂) near the weld to stabilize it. (I tried to get that without my mind going into the gutter and I failed miserably)
Yea I was going to tell him the same thing that the way I do it
Can you turn the welder up a little. Take sum old scrap metal and practice starting with different settings on ur welder
Exactly what I was going to say!
i gave up trying to stick weld, i wish i could do it though
And he’s gotta turn them amps up. That’s some thick stuff I’d have it set to 150 at least if not 180 to make sure it’s melted in there, make starting easier, and make the whole thing faster. Although 180’s probably too high I generally don’t stick stuff that thick and it’s been a long time
I never thought I would need an excavator to split my fire wood. Man you nailed this one.
Next is a excavator wielding a chainsaw to buck the logs down
they have those already, this though, havent seen this version yet although some skid steer people have something similar to this but its quirky and weird, this is simple and straight forward@@AtaQuitMalik
@@brucehurlburt7740those processor attachments are sweet but cost a fortune! I’ve had discussions w my excavator buddy about a simpler solution like this for his smaller machine, it’s great to see this
@@AtaQuitMalik Halverson makes machine like that. watch?v=1B_uVDsEwM0
I love how safe this logsplitter is. UA-cam has a history of intentionally deadly logsplitters. Excellent video!
Genius idea!!! 💡 😎 Now you can split the big logs and drink coffee at the same time. You should patent it .
That is actually a badass splitter ,,, never mind the savings on the spine,,, love it well done
You can use the carcass of the old splitter to build yourself a conveyor (or hopper) system to load wood into the furnace. You made the splitting easy, now make the burning easy.
was thinking the same thing Less work on the back and faster
Something similar to what
Donn DIY made
He can use yanmar to do that, but why split it in 1st place then :D
@@tomaskovacik its better to split it if it's that size of trees
Can you create a tire changer out of the carcass?
Rotate the Beam 45 Degrees so when you are welding, you can weld in the flat position instead of the horizontal position.always try to move the piece you are welding to the easiest welding position if all possible. I run 1/8" 7018 rods at 90 to 120 amps, normally about 110 amps. pulling the rod makes the puddle bigger, but can splatter more, pushing the rod makes the weld bead smaller, but lays down smoother.
More amps also means easier to start/maintain the arc.
Also if you’re sticking the rod real bad check your ground.
Edit: I really struggle with 7018 making a glass bead on the end on restarts I’ll generally beat it against something that is not grounded to knock that glass head off. Generally I’m running 6010/12/13 for work like this.
I don’t know which I like more, the fixing things series, or the random one craft videos. Great work.
That brings to mind the old saying, "Work smarter, not harder!" Well done, Jon. Love this channel,
Great video! I think your next step might be to weld a hitch receiver to your excavator blade then build a small dump trailer to haul the wood in. The engine, pump, wheels and maybe even axle and cylinder from the old splitter might even be reused to build the dump trailer.
Cotton top did a very good video on installing a hitch receiver.
This is my all-time fav project that you've done so far! I love to watch wood being split. Somehow, it is very satisfying to me. Also, I love metal working. I love it when metal it melted, cut, drilled, welded, etc. This was an excellent project idea! Great job!
Jon;
We've been watching your UA-cam channel, off and on, for about a year. Your innovative way of fixing or building what you need, and how you explain it, is very interesting to watch, even for me, who knows next to nothing about machinery. It's fun to learn new stuff, whether you'll ever do it yourself or not.
Today, we watched how you created a new log splitter that you can use with your excavator. We were amazed! I missed the first part where you may have explained what you were going to do, so it was a great surprise to see that you designed it to split UPSIDE DOWN, so you grab and split the log w/o having to PICK it up!!
We always have a LOT of logs to split since we have a lot of oak wilt. Your innovation would make our 2.5-3.5ft wide logs a snap.
Holly
Minnesota
Great project. loved the creativity, reuse, and your usual clear explanations of the process.
The refurbished wood splitter was a great idea, love what you did to adapt it to the mini ex. Makes splitting wood a lot less stress on the back . Probably one of the best ideas I've seen in awhile.
He was following a current mass-produced product available through many dealerships.
That’s seriously impressive - to come up with that design, starting from a flawed Harbour Freight design, and execute it so well is remarkable. Well done, sir. 😊
Just wanted to say for anyone new to stick welding a 7024 welding rod is probably the easiest rod to learn on, you literally can rest it on the material and let it burn. Try it you will be amazed
Works excellent!! One thing you might want to add on in the future is a guard that slides with the bed plate on the end of the cylinder that covers the rod. When the cylinder is fully retracted the guard would not really do much and it would just slide across the body of the cylinder, but when the cylinder was at full extension it would protect the chrome on the rod from accidentally being banged down on a log or a rock.
Once again, excellent video!
Also, to save from having to handle the wood twice maybe you could grab it with the excavator and split it right into a dump trailer!
With the power that seems to have you could probably bolt a 4way splitter onto it and save even more time. I always liked when the wedge was part that moved and the flat stop was stationary so the log didn't move around as much (like you were saying with the way the logs fell off the old splitter). Great job as always!
To everyone saying to add wings to the wedge to make it split multiple ways: There are two reasons that is done on conventional splitters. 1) speed. 2) to reduce the amount of lifting. This attachment makes the second point moot, so let’s look at point 1.
Your logs have to be small enough that the intersection of the + is near the middle, and your splitter has to be stout enough to handle the increased splitting force. The latter has been an issue here which is how the OEM splitter became trashed, so it is a really bad idea to make any change that increases splitting force. Also, perhaps it was missed that he doesn’t need wood as small as would come off a four way split attachment. With a conventional splitter you can just lift the 4way accessory off the wedge when a 2 way split is desired, but here you’d have to climb out of the rig to do it. Finally, with a conventional splitter, gravity holds the attachment in place, but here it would have to lock in place…so wood could wedge between the horizontal wedges and the I beam.
This splitter has converted a difficult task into something that is effortless, almost fun, and very fast, all things considered. If he were selling the firewood then time is money. In this case , though, the splitting has been reduced to a small fraction of the total time and effort needed to produce the firewood. (Starting with felling the tree, and ending with hauling it to the furnace and feeding the fire). If speeding up the splitting reduces reliability or lifespan of the splitter, then it is not a win.
need to get it picked up for the last split, then split and drop into a trailer! cool implement!
Since you are splitting such huge diameters, I would re-attach the blade extension. Also add some “flaring wings” on the back of the splitting wedge. It will help pry apart the stringy woods. Great idea and realization of a dream. Way to go. 👍👍
You’re a content machine! This channel has come a long way since the casting videos
But man, that canon series... good stuff! That was when I found the channel, when all the fabrication channels were doing the Civil War Canon Challenge. John entered and taught me more in those 5-6 videos than most other channels could do in a year. So practical, but still so personable. I really feel like I'm hanging with the farmers and tradespeople I grew up around.
I still think he could have sleeved the canon and fired a ping-pong-ball out of it or something... I am just like... DUDE, come on! I bet we could get him to revisit it if we all went to Patreon and asked him to! 😁
@@ArmchairDeity He definitely did not fire that cannon. wink wink
@@ArmchairDeity there is another channel offsite for that
@@krz8888888 wait.. another channel? FarmCraft202? 😂 Now I gotta hit Patreon to see what I might have missed! 😳
@@K.P.Alexander INDEED!! 🫣💥🫨🤕😵😂
Tip: when stick welding you want to strike your arc like you’re striking a match on a match box only you want to barely touch the metal. The trick is to keep the rod moving at and at the same distance as the rod dissipates. Strike fast but with a very light touch.
He’s 1000% correct. If you look at your video you’re jabbing that rod into the weld zone, so when it fires up, it’s bearing self and sticking. Don’t be afraid to bend that rod in your holder to get a comfortable angle
Also when striking the arc on the edge you can place the stick over the edge and pull up/back against the edge so it strikes nicely every time.
after splitting and stacking wood for my parents for several years i can appreciate your desire to make an attachment out of one. i love it! wish my dad would have had that!!!
Several types of tractor mounted log splitters are available through dealerships.
Great idea, money well spent, I'm sure your back will be thanking you for years to come. Well executed!
Jon, That has got to be one of your most ingenious builds! Not only did you reuse almost all of the materials, but you made it work soooo much better! Please Thank The Cameralady for us. She always takes good video. did you let her do some splitting? I know I would have aksed to. BTW, obviously you can use it to stack the wood also, so the next upgrade should be to attach a chainsaw to it! Thanks!
They do make hydraulic powered chainsaws...
Hydraulic chainsaws are very expensive
Perfect way to round out me week. A humorous and useful vlog from Farmcraft. Thank you John.
Awesome build! Kurtis would be proud of that lathe work! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I think he is fixated with his jig borer!! . But great lathe work!
Another great project.
Whenever I get too obsessed with perfection in my work I remind myself that perfect is the enemy of good.
You forgot to include your vast knowledge of machining those pins. Invaluable! You are truly a "jack-of-all-trades".
What a great idea! After watching the functionality of this attachment, I thought it might be handy to use the old parts of the log splitter to make a mobile conveyer to load the dump truck or trailer with processed wood. Could make your last splits over top of the conveyer and save a step in moving the wood later.
Make all splits over the trailer!!! I'm sure Jon has already done it!
Yeah, a loader belt to the truck to haul back to the boiler. Good idea.
Excellent
Excellent!!
@@grahamcifuentes4451 It would be difficult to grab a chunk of wood that needed to be split again if it were already in the the truck/trailer.
Love it! My only comment is since you are picking up the logs to split them, why not just split them into a trailer so you don't have to come back a second time?
maby for the vid, for us to see better.
Two thoughts. One, weld the cutoff splitting wedge to the end of the other in a tee shape. Maybe it would split two ways then or maybe the logs wouldn’t divide in half as well. Not sure if this would be better or not.
Second idea. If you build protection around the hydraulic cylinder, incorporate a stand into the design so when you disconnect, it remains in a position that is easy to store and reconnect to the excavator. Nice little project that I’m sure you followers will enjoy. Let’s get together sometime soon. I would love to bounce some ideas off you. 😊
Good Ideas - Both
I too was concerned about protecting that Cylinder.
I was thinking a storage stand would be a good idea, too.
Drag your stick to start😠😠😠🫤🫤
@@Wyomingchippewa Ready ! Bring it over.
4 or 6 way splitter
My neighbor and I built one of these over 5 yrs ago. Works great! Saves on the back big time !
Admittedly it's not the first time I've seen this type of excavator attachment, but I really like how you were able to repurpose an existing log splitter. This is still a really smart idea- You can split the logs and also use the splitter as a sort of claw to pick them up. If you had a trailer hitch on your excavator, you could also bring a trailer along with you to the split site, and then load up the split wood.
For the type of split wood youre after I think this was a great repurposing of the log splitter. Turned out great And I think the best part about this is no more back breaking work.
Wow that implement is extremely satisfying to watch. One of those tools that makes a task so much easier that at the end of it you almost wish you had more to do but only for a second. Nice work John!!
Best log splitter upgrade I've seen yet!! Great content.
Haven't read all the comments so maybe someone else mentioned this. Only advice I have (Was a pipe welder until a back injury made me change professions), When welding with 7018, better to push the rod than pull it. Keeps your slag from getting into the weld. Otherwise great job and this is right up my alley for a fun project. Appreciate you sharing it with us.
Beauty of the system also is that you can pick those logs up and put them right in the trailer with your splitter before you split them or after or while you’re splitting. What a great system. Super job. Thanks for sharing.
Surely there must be a company copying and manufacturing this design. Great video as always.
Outdoors with the Morgan’s demonstrated a very similar device manufactured by Spit Fire that sells for about $2600.00. Mike’s comments were exactly the same of how it took the work out of splitting wood. He mainly breaks down big rounds to save his back but you could use it totally as a log splitter. He also mentioned some tricks that he discovered about how to position the rounds before splitting and not split them totally until you get the wood located where you want it to fall. You could even split wood into a trailer and never have to pick anything up. Now you’re only limitation for size is the length of your chain saw bar. This is definitely a game changer! Great job as always!!
Oh yeah! Amazing work! The splitter works so fast. Perhaps worth it to make a sleeve that does 4-way splits? Andrew Camarata made one for his splitter a while back, and it should be no trouble for you to just strap it on top of the current splitting end. Bravo!
Great project Jon. I think you just boosted sales of mini excavators around the planet. 😊
I'm not sure how I stumble in here, but I must say I am impressed! At first I was feeling bad for the log splitter and thinking, replace the beam and get you a Predator engine from Harbor Freight, or heck I'll take it! lol I guessed a few hundred which is a great deal. A split fire excavator splitter is about $1200 plus another $300 for the attachment to the machine. Those logs are just too big to handle with a regular splitter even with a log lift. On a side note. I built a quick attach set of forks for my tractor a few years ago. I have a Lincoln 180 and although the material I was welding I ground 1" steel bar almost to a point and preheated it and the little Lincoln did a heck of a job! I haven't broken them yet. A stick welder is nice for thick and dirty steel. I think I'm going to come back from time to time and check on you! Great job!
This is my absolute favorite kind of project. Where you cut an order of magnitude off of future work. Log splitting becomes an: "Oh yeah, gotta do that while I'm out feeding the chickens this morning" kind of job instead of a "oh yeah, I need to dedicate this weekend to that" kind of job.
When you stop welding, halfway through, with a 70xx rod, a silica bb pools and cools on the end of the electrode. It is dielectric and can make restarts very difficult. You can use a file to clean off the bb. I usually just aggressively poke the end of the rod into the work piece to get it off. I then restrike the ark. Hope this helps 👍
I do the same, or tap the tip of the rod with the flat side of a chipping hammer, most times it breaks off the same way slag breaks of the weld. Be carfull tho cause some times, you'll knock off some of the flux and ruin the rod or make it harder to restart. Pratice and time is key to burning rods. Cleaner weldments goes a long way with 70xx too. Great job, great build.
Only thing I would probably change would be a cage for the cylinders hoses and making the wedge wider. But it looks and work great.
That is hella cool - I wonder if you could use that for demolition of something?? It might also be useful to add a "finger" or long flange coming perpendicular off the "top" of the splitting wedge, towards the excavator? Then you could use it to more easily roll logs around, like using the thumb. Or what if the splitting wedge had a "+" shape, you could split into 4 pieces at once?
An idea for the old splitter system is a trash compactor. Maybe a remote lift or press that can be left outside
What a great idea. I am actually going to try that myself. I cut and sell wood here in Australia. Would make my life so much easier
It turned out absolutely fantastic and you can't beat the price!
A 3/16 7014 rod would have been perfect for this. You can strike the arc easily and just lay it in the gap and let it do all the work. They are often used for structural steel welding.
I much prefer 7014 rods.
I like using 3/16 rod, i think it starts easier (doesnt stick as easily)
I think the most important thing for me is to assume a comfortable welding position. That sounds simple but if your fighting to reach the weld or to smoothly move your arm you are a step behind performing a good weld. Steve😊
Depending on your rod (60xx vs 70xx for example) if you have troubles doing a restart, keep a sanding disc of like 36 grit right by you. Scratch the tip on it. It'll get flux build up so thick it won't arc start.
I like keeping a flat file handy for that. Typically what I use to get slag off as well
@@braggf150 - if you get weld splatter on your sanding disc, you don't feel as guilty throwing it out! Ha ha! :D
Great job! Yeah, definitely a guard for the cylinder, as you hit it several times while cutting those last big logs. One dent in the cylinder way and it's done. And a little grease on the sliding rails.
I use to say that I could probably tie your shoes with the loader I ran and got real familiar with, a Volvo and through the years I’ve yet to operate a machine that can replicate the hydraulic performance or surpass the speed of a Volvo and that especially would be Caterpillar included.Enough about my ability, I am So jealous of the setup that You have going on!! From the Splitter to the wood burner from hell.The idea of throwing close to a ton of wood into it at a single feed just amazes me and I can see it lasting two or more days during the fall if fully loaded plus the water pumps transferring the hot water throughout the radiant heated floors and water heater just baffles me. I’ve got radiant heat in my ceilings that when installed electricity wasn’t a overrated commodity and wasting the energy wasn’t thought of like today,new terminology (efficiency) came into play so in the floor makes a lot more sense. My wood burner is efficient but it’s capacity is maybe 110lbs and that can last usually 4 to 5 hours, so Yes understandingly I’m sad for myself and stoked for You, great job on making do with and getting every btu out of all them chunks of wood 🪵 Hoorah !!!
The thing I love about your channel is you explain everything you do as you are doing it and you seem to know about lots of different things.
Great content as always. Definitely appreciate your sense of humour.. Advantage of using the excavator is that you can make your final cut over a trailer/dump truck and not have to manually load anything. Working and clearing the job site in one go, what could be more efficient. You do need to build a holding frame for it now, so that you can store it off the ground and orient it to easily connect it to the excavator when needed. Conveyor belt idea sounds good, especially when put at the bottom of a hopper filled with logs, and the controls connected to a remote control, feed the logs automatically when needed....the possibilities for further automation here are intriguing, have the boiler feed itself.........
Awesome job John - this new tool will save a small fortune in time and money. Both practical and creative at the same time, you must be proud 👍
I’m blown away how good this turned out that is probably the best log splitter Iv ever seen work
what a great idea! One thing i notice is that when you're splitting those big logs, the action of the cylinder is putting pressure on the mini ex turntable (trying to spin the excavator sideways). If you put the cutting edge on the cylinder side, the force of splitting the wood would move the log, rather than rotate the excavator platform, and will save a TON of wear and tear on the turntable.
Just a thought!
I have the log splitter attachment from Quick Attach for my CTL and its great, but I think yours is a better attachment, you can angle the cut, better vision, awesome job 👍🏻
I think a set of legs on the piston end so you can put it on the ground easier would be a nice addition. Just slightly higher/lower than the piston slider.
And a t on the wedge side to help it balance and split 3 ways
this build feels like it should have a patent
It probably does and he might end up getting sued! Lol
@@sams7655 I think you can only get sued if you try to sell it?
I was thinking the same thing. Get on it John before someone else does!
@@veudeu Doesn't matter if anyone else would try to patent it, because their application would be invalid. This video would constitute "prior art".
Brilliant idea on your part. And even better execution. Those logs looked like butter. It took about 10-15 seconds per split when including line up time. Only about 5 seconds to cut through. Unbelievable.
Brilliantly done!! Better patent that design right now.
I've seen you do some mighty impressive projects, but this is top notch! Congrats!
As soon as I realized what you were doing, I knew this was going to be awesome! That had me smiling for ya! I know how hard of work splitting is, it's fun for some reason but tiring. Picking up the logs or moving them to be split again is the worst part. Man that was so cool! I foresee a bunch of copycats coming! Surprised I hadn't seen this yet. Good Job John! Thanks for another video! I look forward to them
Like they used tell us apprentices “a grinder and paint make you the welder you ain’t”😂
There's probably ample power to add wings to the blade to open the logs up quicker. Nice work.
You're right about the cylinder hitting logs while you're splitting. I saw it happen on the last log you split. Now it's patent time.
You have always amazed me with the versatility of your skills and innovative solutions to a wide range of problems, but the log splitter transformation project has taken things to a higher level. I find myself at a loss for words that adequately expresses how impressive this project is. Let me just say, you da man bro!!
Nice Video as always👍the sticking could be caused by wet/moist electrodes. We had one pack that got a little bit of rain into it and they were sticking crazy too. My dad told me that too, that wet electrodes are sticking
I've heard of people putting wet sticks in an oven to dry them out.
i keep my electrodes in the airing cupboard, next to the hot water cylinder.
One of the best Channels on UA-cam. You earn a lot more Subscribers. The Video, Cut and the explains are on a really high level. Thank you for entertaining us! 👍
That turned out awesome! Now I need one when I get an excavator!
As for the old frame and guts, maybe use it as a hydraulic power pack for rescuing old machines that don't run. You could hook this in and operate their hydraulic functions with it.
Now that goes through the logs like the proverbial hot knife... Congratulations for the epic win idea and execution. I am truly impressed. Definitely money well spent
Incredible outcomes! Your creative ideas have earned an outstanding Grade A++. Truly awe-inspiring!
Great job John and what a massive difference between the original splitter to your uprated one you can use on your excavator. Awesome Farm engineering and $250 is nothing compared to what you would pay for an off the shelf log splitter to run off your excavator 😀👍
You do a lot of metal work that needs to be painted. Have you ever thought of making a powdercoating setup with some type of oven (outdoor?) and spraybooth?
I have, but it's never seemed worth the trouble to me. Maybe one day!
The big problem is you need put the powder coated piece in an oven to fuse the coating. That's a huge oven.
@@FarmCraft101 If you build a tin shack off the boiler , could that get hot enough for curing the powder coat ?
I skipped this video for a couple of weeks, because I thought it would be boring... how wrong I was. That thing is a beast once you start attacking the logs. Always great and entertaining content to watch on the weekend. Thanks
Stacking the wood, will keep you strong! Amazing, how the pieces seem to grow, when you pick them up!
That worked better than I expected! Another idea that came to mind is to put a hydraulic motor on the business end with one of those murder screws that people used to put on the PTO of tractors for splitting wood, then swing it like a rock hammer and just drill the logs apart. The hydraulic motor would probably cost as much as your excavator if you’d buy it new though, but it’s the only excavator mounted log splitter that I can think of that would be faster than your contraption!
I don't get why you call it a murder screw - those things are actually pretty safe - there's no pinch points or anything, just a slowly turning cone.
@@gorak9000 I've heard some horror stories as they are pretty common where I'm from. Try getting your trouser leg caught in one for example.
What a great project, you are truly amazing and a renaissance man ! Keep the great content coming and be safe!
Interesting how well the plasma cutter works for it's intended job, cutting the beam, compared to the "blasting mode" on the welds. :)
Many plasma cutters do actually have a gouging mode. Usually along with special gouging tips. Doesn't work as well as carbon arc gouger but it can be very useful if it's what's available.
Very cool. I like that you can pick up your rounds up if you don’t pinch too hard. Swing around and split onto the pile.
Absolutely astonishing work!!! That woodcutter style could even be put on the market at your Store!!! Maybe you could start manufacturing them !!! Don’t forget to put a Patent on it!!! Great content John !!! HOMERUN on this one !!!
I think you need a 1/4" shield attached to the pushing part of the splitter to protect the ram !
Yup this will eventually get damaged without a shield. Even a fabric cover would help.
That is no doubt this is your best project ever. Definitely a back saver. Excellent video and I love your candor real time, real reactions.
I have a buddy that just lost a finger on his log splitter. No way I see you doing that with your setup. Nice job !
That was cool. Weld a guard /stand around that cylinder. Also a cross wing so you get 4 splits per throw.
I've welded thousands of pounds of 7018, it's still my favorite stick rod, so don't give up on it. Tack a scrap of steel just off the end of your start and scratch your rod on that. Angle the rod backwards about 45 degrees and drag it to light it up. Once you get it to where the bead begins you can angle it up to 80 or 90 deg to get more penetration. If it won't light easily turn the amps up, for 1/8 about 125 max DC Reverse. Don't weave, just drag it along the joint slowly enough so the bead cross section is convex shaped the way you want. Watch the puddle, not the arc. I often position my head so the rod tip obscures most of the arc so I can see the puddle better. Wrap the ground cable around the work piece to counteract any magnetic arc blow. Direct the rod more towards the vertical side to make an even filet. Practice a few beads on scraps to get the drag speed right. The slag should curl up and come off easily. Make sure you clean off all rust and mill scale for attractive welds. A litle pre-heat also will insure there's no moisture in the joint. For an easier rod to start out with try 7014, less amps required and a pretty blue bead. If these tips don't help you will need a better welding machine.
Thanks!
I love it! way better design then the one I have that has a wedge that attaches to the thumb and had a backstop that replaces the bucket. I also commend you for being so humble, to many people on here are real A-holes when it comes to welding or machining... great job! keep it up!!
Very clever, simple and well made. I never thought about this splitter could ever been use with an excavator but now I do. I'm glad that you bought the big makita grinder, as I and others adviced you to get one. Thanks for sharing your time with us. Keep up the good work and take care!
I think you should use the "gripper capability" more, like gripping a log and splitting it on top of a trailer. Also in retrospect I'd be thinking about doing the mount asymmetrically so that the gripped log is centered to the stick. Probably not much of a difference but it might feel more naturally. And you could incorporate the thump to grip stuff in two dimensions (given enough circuits on the hydros)
CAD aka Cardboard Advance Design has always been a tried and true farm method. Grandpa taught me stick welding along with that form of CAD back in my youth on the farm. ❤
If that's the view in your backyard I am very very envious 😢😢. It is absolutely gorgeous