Cam, I cannot stress enough how much I admire your humbleness and genuineness. You make fantastic tables and I find your videos wholesome and entirely satisfying to watch. I am a builder here in Australia and you can imagine the LAST thing i would want to see is a work-working video when I get home from work. Yet, here we are. :D
We clean multiple times a week. This is a sawmill that produces up to a cord a day of off cuts. One would be logical to assume we would keep it cleaner.
You know what I like about this, it's how you stayed away from the lines with sawing and creeped up to them with your chisel. This is very good tutorial about on how to these kind of joinery and also how to use the tools necessary for doing these joineries. This is also a great tutorial on how to work efficiently. It's really superb!
I finally found you! I saw this video a year ago, added a comment (which is still the first 👍) but I didn't subscribe. but I have already fixed it and placed a subscription. great job.
The electric pressure washer seems to do the job without adding too much water to the mill site. Check out some of our other videos, we mill some beautiful walnut and other species.
This was a branch off of a tree if you can believe that. We salvaged one of the largest claro walnut trees locally and it had five leaders all similar in size. I love the pressure electric washer for the logs, doesn't dig into good wood and clears the mess without swamping the mill area! Thanks for the support, we have some other great walnut milling videos on our channel.
@@jackkarg2578That’s how it’s done. Every sawyer I know does it that way including me. I just don’t do it next to the sawmill or anywhere near my work area.
That log was awesome! You did a killer job with your cuts. 10/4 is perfect for that log. So many would have done 8/4. I hope that stick makes you some good money. I wish I had a plank or two. That is gorgeous wood. Well done!
Thanks for your comment. 10/4 seems to work out really well with that 12' length as we can generally end up around 8/4 finished. We milled plenty of beautiful wood too thin years ago and ended up breaking our long stock down in half so we could end up with usable thickness at the end. The longer the log, the thicker you need to start. We would have milled it into 8/4 if we were turning it into dimensional lumber. We have some other walnut videos uploaded and plenty more coming. If you didn't catch it, this log was just a branch from a walnut tree. Ill have a video of the main log soon, close to 7' across and solid!
@craigbruce2530 Our furniture company is able to utilize most lumber stock but we prefer to use the wood products for the intentions we had while milling them! Some slabs just don't make the cut, regardless of thickness and drying. Thanks for the support! Great minds think alike!
I pressure wash mine before putting it on the mill. Less mess in the mill area. I’m sorry for the negative comment but you guys are making your work area a death trap. So messy with trip hazards. Since you have forks you can set up your slabs on 4x4 blocks so you can move them to their permanent place. Just a thought for you guys.
Thanks for the suggestions. Some logs get processed differently at different times for different reasons. We are limited with options as far as appropriate space to clean mud messes. This seems to be efficient most of the time. I agree that muck and wet debris isn't as safe as it could be.
We ended up getting some beautiful slabs from that log. It was one of many branches from a monster claro walnut base. Stay tuned for that video. Thanks for watching!
Good choice, we have quite a few rifle stock blanks that we have template cut and long term dry. This log hasn't been processed yet, currently waiting it's turn in the kiln. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the support. Claro walnut is one of our all-time favorites. Check out the english walnut video we recently posted, it's another amazing log.
@@harleywest9250 We will eventually have some footage of us milling roots. We have some root content on our instagram but agree a full video is needed. And we have some killer white oak from a local salvage we will be milling into soon. Be sure to hit that bell notification so you don't miss any of them!
Beautiful slabs Brothers, I have some beautiful Aussie red cedar slabs with max 1850mm width at crotch end which I cut with my Stihl 088 and Granberg 84" Alaskan mill, if anyone is interested I can post pics of them, keep the dream alive👍
Fresh cut walnut is always that green color until the oxygen hits it and allows it to oxidize. Walnut will darken significantly 12 hours after milling. And the sapwood will darken as well. Thanks for watching.
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC I cut a ton of walnut in California over the last 40 year a nd color is always dark brown and the sapwood is white tillI take it out of my attic kiln.. Maybe it’s where you live in the country affects this..
@terrytenley9327 Location and nutrients play a huge role in my experience. I've cut all colors and shades of walnuts. Some were darker before oxidation than others after fully oxidized.
On something like this drying is the key and it's such big wide boards. You have to have a kiln to accommodate such large pieces and it will take time and then must be sterilized. I command the Sawyer who took this project on 👍
We strictly air dry all walnut a year per inch outside with atleast three months in the kiln with a gentle start and hot finish! Most of our large walnut spends more time air drying inside after before the kiln. It stays flat if time is taken. Thanks for watching!
@@joebufford2972 its hard to wait when you mill something beautiful. It's a little easier when you have a lot of wood. We have a few amazing walnut videos we are working on right now.
This is what furniture and gun stocks are made from. This must be a tough proposition to turn into boards. I use industrial band saws on the job to but metal, but your saw mill take band saws to a whole 'nother level.
We break down some slabs into gun stock and other items after the kiln. The slabs tell us the intended use they want to become depending on cracks, checks, twist, and every other defect post kiln drying. We do keep some beautiful gun stocks on hand. Thanks for watching, check out the english walnut we recently milled with beeswing figure!
We have gravel log yards and we always seem to have gravel and debris on bark. We remove loose bark and try to clean a path in front of the blade as we can. Seems to help longevity.
We run a solar kiln with dehumification. So, we dry a little slower. Usually a month per inch depending on the time of year. We are uploading the takedown video of the tree that branch came from shortly!
Just curious what moisture content you dry it down to before working with it. Quite a few years ago in line winds layed down 3 black walnut trees at my brothers place. He had them boarded out. I think it was 2 years later he had kitchen cabinets built and some other furniture built also. Does drying it down to 7% sound right? My memory isn't as good as it used to be. By the way the piece you just stabbed out is absolutely gorgeous.
It depends on the area the wood is in. Florida and higher humid areas may be 14% where as desert areas may be closer to 6%. This log was a branch from a giant tree. We have a stack of these to mill still. Thanks for the support.
Most walnut slabs will darken heavily within 12 hours of being milled. Some of our black and english walnut have very pronounced yellow streaks after kiln drying and flattening. You never know what colors you'll end up with when working with walnut!
If only these people knew what to do with this wood rather than just make pour plastic over it. Man I built furniture for 27 years. There's some nice stuff. I could do with that table tops. Countertops, but not solid live, you know. In tables, those will make beautiful doors for armua. Book match. Wall treatments
There will be many single slab double live edge tables made out of this log. We generally only use enough epoxy to fill voids and stabilize cracks. Sometimes just bow ties. Thanks for being part of the furniture community. 27 years is a big contribution.
Electric motors are game changers. We ran an lx250 gas motor version through a large walnut and this electric lx250 performs completely different! Diesel is a good option for mobile and gas is a good option for entry.
We have a few retail locations in Portland that carry our products as well as us having our own furniture shop. I will have a walk through video of our shop and current projects soon. Any species you would like to see us mill?
I do like how they pressure washed both sides of every slab to get all the foreign particles off so it’s not to ruin or jam up a saw Or cause injury when being manipulated by hand
Foreign particles don't have any effect on the saw....They're already Cut!! . . The Error was soaking perfectly DRY wood to increase the chances of Post-cutting Warpage..!!!
The added sawdust can cause mold, fungus, and major staining when air dried long term. Some species won't show it after flattened, some will. We try to take steps to avoid the staining. Thanks for watching.
I do't do that with my logs. I prefer to just brush the sawdust off . Soaking them with a pressure washer just makes the wood wetter and with more chance of the water staining the timber
@RebuildingScotland Portland milling is 9 months in the rain. Mold staining from sawdust is more serious on some species than others. Every slab we dry has water marks, which always dissappear when flattened. Thanks for watching. We scrape some slabs, leave others alone, and pressure wash pretty ones very well!
I'll save the detailed critique, and just ask ...: "Why take a nicely dried log and Immediately soak it with water....(A large screwdriver or prybar would've gotten the loose bark off..... And then....Spraying Both sides of the cut slabs.....Warpage will be significant when Re-dried...!! **Your project....Your problems....**
This log was at 40% moisture when it was milled. We dry our walnut to 10% moisture in a kiln. We have zero dry logs out of the 800+ between our two log yards. Loose bark isn't the only issue. Small pieces of gravel are the main concern. We pressure wash the logs to prolong our blades and for safety. You'll see large companies pressure wash logs post kiln drying to show grain with no concern with warping or water reabsorbing. These slabs have seen 3 years of air drying to far with no warp.
It keeps the dust off of the ground. My mill doesn't allow our skid steer to get behind to clean up the sawdust. It's raining 9 months out of the year so the sawdust gets heavy quick. We upgraded to a stationary collection that shoots it to a pile further away so it's hands free now.
@WideCutSawmill Lasting burns! A few from my crew had some when we had our saws in the root mass breaking it down. Usually doesn't happen if you wear pants instead of shorts!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC ok..... I just cut down a straight trunk Bl Walnut. For countertop keeping contrasting sapwood, which will dry up a bit browner ( maybe live edge, semi live, combo or finidhed. Depending on yoeld,,,,,,and Live Edge table, plus other... maybe staircase. 18 ft 4 in. Length. Diam. W/bark is 31 at base, doen to about 29, 10 ft up, then taper down a bit, then back to 30 at a crotch commencement.plus 3 fat crotche "V" sections at 31" but to feed sideway through an Amish run 32"w/20'L band saw, is the plan. Plus a 2 ft x3 ft straight short, and not gonna waste it if over 5 in. Diameter... lathed spindals, small dimentional trim, etc. Wish me luck in my old age !! Will natural dry for 2 yrs. May go with 4 to 6 fat slabs. Is 9/4 not enough to end at 2 inch finished ?
Depends at what length you cut it at. 18 ft long, we would mill 16/4 and hope for the best through air and kiln drying. 12 ft lengths are always 10/4 or 12/4 if we are.doing live edge slabs. The sap wood dries faster with walnut and tends to pull edges up and down more compared to complete heartwood slabs. Good luck, each log is an adventure!
I work kut they 12 ft long 2 wide so 12x2 = 24 ft area each slab aprox an if sold at $£20 a ft then eacb slab is abkut 480 quid times however many slabs you get from it
10 good slabs and one smaller one was the total. Let's say they are 2.5 inches thick and 12 ft long. And Let's say the average width is also 2.5 ft wide. 2.5x12x2.5 Each slab is around 75 board ft. Kiln dried and flattened, they will be around $20/bd ft. Some are already spoken for. Thanks for watching!
Está bien el trabajo de aserraje que están haciendo, pero esa máquina Carro (así se llama) es para producir mucha madera aserradas, no es necesario lavar con agua los tablones, basta con tener un pedazo de la misma sierra de 0.30 ó 0.40cm. de largo y mientras sale el tablón se le va sacando el aserrín, es más práctico y más rápido el trabajo... Y si esa máquina Carro fuera el corte vertical y con columnas y ganchos para sujetar los rollos se hace el aserraje más rápido... Lo sé porque fui Oficial Aserrador de máquina Carro y Oficial Aserrador de máquina Sinfin con más de 25 años de experiencia... Saludos desde República Argentina. Me gustaría que me contesten si les sirve mí comentario pero en idioma español.
El uso de agua suele ser para limpiar la podredumbre y las áreas que necesitan atención. Normalmente limpiamos las losas grandes para poder tener buenas imágenes de grano para después de que salgan del horno. Sí, una configuración diferente sería más eficiente. Estamos limitados en el espacio de descarga, de lo contrario tendríamos rodillos. Me encanta saber de su servicio como aserrador. ¡Gracias por mirar y no te pierdas ninguno de nuestros próximos vídeos! Hola República Argentina. Miguel
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC Gracias por contestar, yo decía por el tiempo que se pierde al lavar los tablones pero esta todo bien. Siempre me gusta mirar los videos y para ver como trabajan en otros países, el ser Oficial Aserrador era para mí como un hobby, hoy ya estoy retirado por la edad. Lo que les dije de la máquina Carro, es así es más práctico y se que con un poco de esfuerzo lo tendrán, las hojas de sierra con las que yo trabajaba tenían 10m. de largo y 5" (12cm) de ancho, además perdonen que les pregunte, saben Uds. que la sierra avisa cuando está por cortarse?... Saludos para todos Ustedes.
Pasamos más tiempo filmando para nuestro canal de UA-cam que en un día de producción rápido. ¡Nunca me quejo al ver la veta antes de pasar a la siguiente losa! Nuestra máquina está configurada principalmente por computadora con la altura y el grosor establecidos, pero el resto se controla manualmente. ¡Me encantaría tener varios aserraderos diferentes para satisfacer todas nuestras necesidades! La hoja de 5 pulgadas de grosor la mantendría mucho más plana, ¡estas ruedas son demasiado pequeñas para pasar por encima de las 1,5 pulgadas actualmente! ¡Gracias de nuevo por mirar!@@juancasimiro3865
The person helping is a contractor friend of mine, who doesn't typically mill with me. Mills can be dangerous when there are more than one person making decisions at once, equally as dangerous when nobody is making decisions and assumptions are made that everyone is on the same page. We have never had an accident nor injury, I would like to think me being bossy helps keep everyone safe! Thanks for the comment, I will see if I can keep my order giving to a minimum. Check back after a few more big logs and let me know how I am progressing.
Q: Isn't using a high pressure water wash counter productive? That's surely going to force water into the freshly cut open pores of the wood, and add another like 5 years to the dry time...?? Why would you do that? Why not let it dry without bathing it in water? I've never seen any other person do what you did. Or am I missing something here that only you have discovered?
Good question. There are several companies who pressure wash their slabs to show grain after they are out of the kiln and they swear it doesn't add internal moisture. Pressure washers won't add water through the pores of wood. Getting the fine dust off of slabs that have a long dry time seems to work best for us. These slabs will see three to four years of air drying before they hit the kiln. Thanks for watching!
We have done windex, diesel, soaps, all sorts of things. Diesel is the best but horrible mess and smell. Soaks into the lumber as the LX250 doesn't have a precision dripper.
We have almost seven acres between our two properties and our 3000 sq ft shop for dry storage. Always looks like a mess but wood is always cycling through! Thanks for watching!
You guys are doing more work than that. Forklift is tied up. How do I apply that I gotta. You guys are lifting up too much weight with that forklift to work. your sticker properly. Got too many of them.
I got a good chuckle out of that. He is actually my friend who is a builder in the Portland area. His labor days are behind him besides when I make him mill with me!
Walnut is walnut.Why do people keep coming up with all these names for walmot, Clara Carla walnut bogus walnut. Come on, this is not the pod industry, it is lumber
Many different types of walnut wood. Different colors, hardness, availability, among other more important distinguishing factors. Pod industry? Thanks for adding your insight, seems very valuable.
I am sorry someone from the walnut department has been sending you bs marketing. There are only a few varieties of walnut that have been established for over a century. No botany degree needed to cut wood. Cheers.
Thanks for the support! We do have a solution that can alleviate any of the stress that those pesky scientists cause by naming wood. I would recommend watching my videos as some find them relaxing. I'll post my next walnut milling video as black walnut, no sub species. As a respectful nod to you good sir. Cheers.
Cam, I cannot stress enough how much I admire your humbleness and genuineness. You make fantastic tables and I find your videos wholesome and entirely satisfying to watch. I am a builder here in Australia and you can imagine the LAST thing i would want to see is a work-working video when I get home from work. Yet, here we are. :D
The trades and craftsmen seem to relax to watching others work and create. Seems to be a common theme. Thanks for the support.
❤
Those caramel tones are spectacular
Wait until they oxidize and dry. This was an amazing tree to harvest.
You would think you would clean up instead of walking on everything
We clean multiple times a week. This is a sawmill that produces up to a cord a day of off cuts. One would be logical to assume we would keep it cleaner.
You know what I like about this, it's how you stayed away from the lines with sawing and creeped up to them with your chisel. This is very good tutorial about on how to these kind of joinery and also how to use the tools necessary for doing these joineries. This is also a great tutorial on how to work efficiently. It's really superb!
Kind words that aren't quite fitting for the video but appreciated!
I finally found you! I saw this video a year ago, added a comment (which is still the first 👍) but I didn't subscribe. but I have already fixed it and placed a subscription. great job.
I try to stay hidden only to reward my true followers. Thanks for the subscribe! Another video coming this month!
Mother Nature is the best artist on the planet 👍🏴
Mother nature does what I can't! Thanks for the support.
Absolutely ❤❤
That 2nd slab is absolutely beautiful on the underside
I agree. Second one was a stunner.
Nice cutting with the saw it really does a nice flat cut of the wide log !
Thanks for watching. Carbide blades keep the flatness perfect on logs. Sharp and slow!
Wow. Now that is just beautiful.
This log was just a branch from a large walnut we took down. Thanks for the support!
first of your videos I've watched. that grain really popped when you washed the slabs! good job!
The electric pressure washer seems to do the job without adding too much water to the mill site. Check out some of our other videos, we mill some beautiful walnut and other species.
That log produced some incredible slabs. I've never seen anybody use a pressure washer to clean off their slabs, great idea!
This was a branch off of a tree if you can believe that. We salvaged one of the largest claro walnut trees locally and it had five leaders all similar in size. I love the pressure electric washer for the logs, doesn't dig into good wood and clears the mess without swamping the mill area! Thanks for the support, we have some other great walnut milling videos on our channel.
Personally, I wouldn't cut a perfectly Dry log and then ADD Water to the slabs...!!! But that's just ME.....
@@jackkarg2578That’s how it’s done. Every sawyer I know does it that way including me. I just don’t do it next to the sawmill or anywhere near my work area.
That log was awesome! You did a killer job with your cuts. 10/4 is perfect for that log. So many would have done 8/4. I hope that stick makes you some good money. I wish I had a plank or two. That is gorgeous wood. Well done!
Thanks for your comment. 10/4 seems to work out really well with that 12' length as we can generally end up around 8/4 finished. We milled plenty of beautiful wood too thin years ago and ended up breaking our long stock down in half so we could end up with usable thickness at the end. The longer the log, the thicker you need to start. We would have milled it into 8/4 if we were turning it into dimensional lumber. We have some other walnut videos uploaded and plenty more coming. If you didn't catch it, this log was just a branch from a walnut tree. Ill have a video of the main log soon, close to 7' across and solid!
@craigbruce2530 Our furniture company is able to utilize most lumber stock but we prefer to use the wood products for the intentions we had while milling them! Some slabs just don't make the cut, regardless of thickness and drying. Thanks for the support! Great minds think alike!
I pressure wash mine before putting it on the mill. Less mess in the mill area. I’m sorry for the negative comment but you guys are making your work area a death trap. So messy with trip hazards. Since you have forks you can set up your slabs on 4x4 blocks so you can move them to their permanent place. Just a thought for you guys.
Thanks for the suggestions. Some logs get processed differently at different times for different reasons. We are limited with options as far as appropriate space to clean mud messes. This seems to be efficient most of the time. I agree that muck and wet debris isn't as safe as it could be.
❤
That wood would make some beautiful high end gun stocks.
A lot of slabs that move too much while air and kiln drying get broke down into gun stocks and lumber. Thanks for watching!
I always watch till the end. Love your videos looking forward to the next one. Be well and God Bless.
I love to hear that. Thanks for watching. Stay tuned for the next video. We are milling a giant chunk of claro walnut roots!
Nice looking slabs 😮
Kind words. This was a really special log.
Some Beautiful Planks
We ended up getting some beautiful slabs from that log. It was one of many branches from a monster claro walnut base. Stay tuned for that video. Thanks for watching!
What I can see of the natural beauty of the wood? I would say they would make excellent blanks for Rifle Stocks ! How much go that route?
Good choice, we have quite a few rifle stock blanks that we have template cut and long term dry. This log hasn't been processed yet, currently waiting it's turn in the kiln. Thanks for watching!
Damn what a bar that would make
We had a total of a dozen or so slabs. Beautiful claro grain in these slabs. Thanks for watching.
well done great job and fantastic looking slabs
Thanks for the support. Claro walnut is one of our all-time favorites. Check out the english walnut video we recently posted, it's another amazing log.
You guys do amazing work out there. Such beautiful wood and great craftsmanship. Keep it up!!!
Thanks. We have some amazing trees in the Northwest and the walnuts are some of the most beautiful!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC I would love to see some walnut roots or even some different species of oak!
@@harleywest9250 We will eventually have some footage of us milling roots. We have some root content on our instagram but agree a full video is needed. And we have some killer white oak from a local salvage we will be milling into soon. Be sure to hit that bell notification so you don't miss any of them!
@@michdavid7467 We should be more strict about ppe. Glasses would be a smart thing to add.
Beautiful! I love watching videos people use their WM.
Our Wood-Mizer hasn't ever skipped a beat. Keep sharp carbides on it and it just keeps cutting flat wood!
Gorgeous slabs fo future customers
We have finished a few of these pieces and they are amazing. Thanks for watching!
Beautiful slabs Brothers, I have some beautiful Aussie red cedar slabs with max 1850mm width at crotch end which I cut with my Stihl 088 and Granberg 84" Alaskan mill, if anyone is interested I can post pics of them, keep the dream alive👍
Sounds like some nice crotch wood material! Get some content of you milling it and post it!
Nature’s natural work of art 👍Thanks for sharing from Scotland my favourite wood 👍🏴
Hello from Scotland! Thanks for watching. Don't miss out on our next videos, we will have more claro up on the mill after a massive bastogne walnut.
Wow, what a log. Beautiful grain.J.Au-en
We have another video of another branch from the same tree, check it out! Thanks for the support!
The slabs would make for a beautiful live-edge dining table and other furniture pieces.
Most will become just that. They will be hitting the kiln in two loads from now. Stay tuned for when we pull them out! Appreciate the support.
This is the lightest color walnut I ever saw. Plus the sap wood is white and I see none of that.. Great job cutting slabs..
Fresh cut walnut is always that green color until the oxygen hits it and allows it to oxidize. Walnut will darken significantly 12 hours after milling. And the sapwood will darken as well. Thanks for watching.
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC I cut a ton of walnut in California over the last 40 year a nd color is always dark brown and the sapwood is white tillI take it out of my attic kiln.. Maybe it’s where you live in the country affects this..
@terrytenley9327 Location and nutrients play a huge role in my experience. I've cut all colors and shades of walnuts. Some were darker before oxidation than others after fully oxidized.
Muy buen video y útil espero que hagas más videos para que todos los vean!!
Thank you for the support. Any suggestions on species?
On something like this drying is the key and it's such big wide boards. You have to have a kiln to accommodate such large pieces and it will take time and then must be sterilized. I command the Sawyer who took this project on 👍
We strictly air dry all walnut a year per inch outside with atleast three months in the kiln with a gentle start and hot finish! Most of our large walnut spends more time air drying inside after before the kiln. It stays flat if time is taken. Thanks for watching!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC that is awesome to take so much time for those pieces of wood but they deserve it. Thank you!
@@joebufford2972 its hard to wait when you mill something beautiful. It's a little easier when you have a lot of wood. We have a few amazing walnut videos we are working on right now.
This is what furniture and gun stocks are made from. This must be a tough proposition to turn into boards. I use industrial band saws on the job to but metal, but your saw mill take band saws to a whole 'nother level.
We break down some slabs into gun stock and other items after the kiln. The slabs tell us the intended use they want to become depending on cracks, checks, twist, and every other defect post kiln drying. We do keep some beautiful gun stocks on hand. Thanks for watching, check out the english walnut we recently milled with beeswing figure!
Beautiful wood...
We love claro walnut. Thanks for watching. Check out our other milling videos!
Claro Walnut? I live in Wisconsin, I do not know if we have those growing here. but it would be nice to know where they do grow.
Just a west coast version of black walnut. I'm not sure how far inland they have made it. Thanks for watching!
Do you get a lot better blade life power washing before the milling?
We have gravel log yards and we always seem to have gravel and debris on bark. We remove loose bark and try to clean a path in front of the blade as we can. Seems to help longevity.
What do you do with the cutting edge protectors?
The plastic that covers the blades when new?
I’m curious , when you put a 10/4 slab into the kiln , how long on average does it take for the slabs to dry completely ? Thanks for your time .
We run a solar kiln with dehumification. So, we dry a little slower. Usually a month per inch depending on the time of year. We are uploading the takedown video of the tree that branch came from shortly!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC Thank You .
No worries. That video should be uploaded tomorrow. Wait until you see the size of the tree.@@williamconway1287
Just curious what moisture content you dry it down to before working with it. Quite a few years ago in line winds layed down 3 black walnut trees at my brothers place. He had them boarded out. I think it was 2 years later he had kitchen cabinets built and some other furniture built also. Does drying it down to 7% sound right? My memory isn't as good as it used to be. By the way the piece you just stabbed out is absolutely gorgeous.
It depends on the area the wood is in. Florida and higher humid areas may be 14% where as desert areas may be closer to 6%. This log was a branch from a giant tree. We have a stack of these to mill still. Thanks for the support.
Thanks.
If the yellow color stayed that would be awsome wood .
Most walnut slabs will darken heavily within 12 hours of being milled. Some of our black and english walnut have very pronounced yellow streaks after kiln drying and flattening. You never know what colors you'll end up with when working with walnut!
Amazing guut ❤👍🙏🥰
Thanks for the support!
Wow !!! What is that throat? 50-55 inches?
We can almost get to 60 inches with the guide wheels removed. We usually chainsaw jackets or flare off to fit monsters. Thanks for the support!
If only these people knew what to do with this wood rather than just make pour plastic over it. Man I built furniture for 27 years. There's some nice stuff. I could do with that table tops. Countertops, but not solid live, you know. In tables, those will make beautiful doors for armua. Book match.
Wall treatments
There will be many single slab double live edge tables made out of this log. We generally only use enough epoxy to fill voids and stabilize cracks. Sometimes just bow ties. Thanks for being part of the furniture community. 27 years is a big contribution.
I see you have an electric motor. If I ever get a mill I also plan to have an electric motor.
Electric motors are game changers. We ran an lx250 gas motor version through a large walnut and this electric lx250 performs completely different! Diesel is a good option for mobile and gas is a good option for entry.
Eyes protection?
We do use eye protection and ppe most of the time. Thanks for watching!
What is the ultimate goal for the wood"
We have a few retail locations in Portland that carry our products as well as us having our own furniture shop. I will have a walk through video of our shop and current projects soon. Any species you would like to see us mill?
I do like how they pressure washed both sides of every slab to get all the foreign particles off so it’s not to ruin or jam up a saw Or cause injury when being manipulated by hand
Foreign particles don't have any effect on the saw....They're already Cut!! . . The Error was soaking perfectly DRY wood to increase the chances of Post-cutting Warpage..!!!
The added sawdust can cause mold, fungus, and major staining when air dried long term. Some species won't show it after flattened, some will. We try to take steps to avoid the staining. Thanks for watching.
Again, perfectly dry wood is wood that is heading out of the kiln, not wood in log form. Thanks for the support!
I do't do that with my logs. I prefer to just brush the sawdust off . Soaking them with a pressure washer just makes the wood wetter and with more chance of the water staining the timber
@RebuildingScotland Portland milling is 9 months in the rain. Mold staining from sawdust is more serious on some species than others. Every slab we dry has water marks, which always dissappear when flattened. Thanks for watching. We scrape some slabs, leave others alone, and pressure wash pretty ones very well!
Where y’all from?
Damascus, Oregon. Surrounded by these hardwoods! What about you?
Flip one of two slabs and use crotch ends butt to butt for a beautiful epoxy table
Inevitably, we will have a few bookmatched tables out of this log when out of the kiln. Thanks for the support!
Where is this. ?
Both of our log yards are in Damascus, Oregon USA. Thanks for watching. Check out our other claro walnut logs we have milled!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC Oh very far. ..
@@viorelscrob6391 Do you have claro walnuts where you are from?
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC i am from Romania, what you said. ..?
@viorelscrob6391 Are there claro walnut trees is Romania?
I'll save the detailed critique, and just ask ...: "Why take a nicely dried log and Immediately soak it with water....(A large screwdriver or prybar would've gotten the loose bark off.....
And then....Spraying Both sides of the cut slabs.....Warpage will be significant when Re-dried...!!
**Your project....Your problems....**
This log was at 40% moisture when it was milled. We dry our walnut to 10% moisture in a kiln. We have zero dry logs out of the 800+ between our two log yards. Loose bark isn't the only issue. Small pieces of gravel are the main concern. We pressure wash the logs to prolong our blades and for safety. You'll see large companies pressure wash logs post kiln drying to show grain with no concern with warping or water reabsorbing. These slabs have seen 3 years of air drying to far with no warp.
I haven’t seen a dust collector on anyone’s mill before. Do you do that just because of your mill’s location?
It keeps the dust off of the ground. My mill doesn't allow our skid steer to get behind to clean up the sawdust. It's raining 9 months out of the year so the sawdust gets heavy quick. We upgraded to a stationary collection that shoots it to a pile further away so it's hands free now.
…and walnut dust is quite toxic.
@franklinbrooks9506 Walnut sawdust is the only type I have actually gotten burns from. Chainsaw chips in the shoes can even cause burns if left.
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC that’s interesting. I didn’t know that.
@WideCutSawmill Lasting burns! A few from my crew had some when we had our saws in the root mass breaking it down. Usually doesn't happen if you wear pants instead of shorts!
Why 10/4 ? Why not 9/4 ??
10/4 was chosen because of the length of the log. Will yield close to an 8/4 finished table. Thanks for watching!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC ok..... I just cut down a straight trunk Bl Walnut. For countertop keeping contrasting sapwood, which will dry up a bit browner ( maybe live edge, semi live, combo or finidhed. Depending on yoeld,,,,,,and Live Edge table, plus other... maybe staircase.
18 ft 4 in. Length. Diam. W/bark is 31 at base, doen to about 29, 10 ft up, then taper down a bit, then back to 30 at a crotch commencement.plus 3 fat crotche "V" sections at 31" but to feed sideway through an Amish run 32"w/20'L band saw, is the plan. Plus a 2 ft x3 ft straight short, and not gonna waste it if over 5 in. Diameter... lathed spindals, small dimentional trim, etc.
Wish me luck in my old age !! Will natural dry for 2 yrs.
May go with 4 to 6 fat slabs. Is 9/4 not enough to end at 2 inch finished ?
Depends at what length you cut it at. 18 ft long, we would mill 16/4 and hope for the best through air and kiln drying. 12 ft lengths are always 10/4 or 12/4 if we are.doing live edge slabs. The sap wood dries faster with walnut and tends to pull edges up and down more compared to complete heartwood slabs. Good luck, each log is an adventure!
I work kut they 12 ft long 2 wide so 12x2 = 24 ft area each slab aprox an if sold at $£20 a ft then eacb slab is abkut 480 quid times however many slabs you get from it
We also factor in thickness when determining the board footage and pricing. Thanks for watching!
assuming you get 10 slab that near 5 grand
10 good slabs and one smaller one was the total. Let's say they are 2.5 inches thick and 12 ft long. And Let's say the average width is also 2.5 ft wide. 2.5x12x2.5 Each slab is around 75 board ft. Kiln dried and flattened, they will be around $20/bd ft. Some are already spoken for. Thanks for watching!
Está bien el trabajo de aserraje que están haciendo, pero esa máquina Carro (así se llama) es para producir mucha madera aserradas, no es necesario lavar con agua los tablones, basta con tener un pedazo de la misma sierra de 0.30 ó 0.40cm. de largo y mientras sale el tablón se le va sacando el aserrín, es más práctico y más rápido el trabajo...
Y si esa máquina Carro fuera el corte vertical y con columnas y ganchos para sujetar los rollos se hace el aserraje más rápido...
Lo sé porque fui Oficial Aserrador de máquina Carro y Oficial Aserrador de máquina Sinfin con más de 25 años de experiencia...
Saludos desde República Argentina.
Me gustaría que me contesten si les sirve mí comentario pero en idioma español.
El uso de agua suele ser para limpiar la podredumbre y las áreas que necesitan atención. Normalmente limpiamos las losas grandes para poder tener buenas imágenes de grano para después de que salgan del horno. Sí, una configuración diferente sería más eficiente. Estamos limitados en el espacio de descarga, de lo contrario tendríamos rodillos. Me encanta saber de su servicio como aserrador. ¡Gracias por mirar y no te pierdas ninguno de nuestros próximos vídeos!
Hola República Argentina. Miguel
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC Gracias por contestar, yo decía por el tiempo que se pierde al lavar los tablones pero esta todo bien.
Siempre me gusta mirar los videos y para ver como trabajan en otros países, el ser Oficial Aserrador era para mí como un hobby, hoy ya estoy retirado por la edad.
Lo que les dije de la máquina Carro, es así es más práctico y se que con un poco de esfuerzo lo tendrán, las hojas de sierra con las que yo trabajaba tenían 10m. de largo y 5" (12cm) de ancho, además perdonen que les pregunte, saben Uds. que la sierra avisa cuando está por cortarse?...
Saludos para todos Ustedes.
Pasamos más tiempo filmando para nuestro canal de UA-cam que en un día de producción rápido. ¡Nunca me quejo al ver la veta antes de pasar a la siguiente losa! Nuestra máquina está configurada principalmente por computadora con la altura y el grosor establecidos, pero el resto se controla manualmente. ¡Me encantaría tener varios aserraderos diferentes para satisfacer todas nuestras necesidades! La hoja de 5 pulgadas de grosor la mantendría mucho más plana, ¡estas ruedas son demasiado pequeñas para pasar por encima de las 1,5 pulgadas actualmente! ¡Gracias de nuevo por mirar!@@juancasimiro3865
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC está todo bien Sr.
Holy Smokes!
Fun log to mill. Thanks for watching!
These slabs are now dry!
Damn Pretty!
I would have to agree. Gotta love opening up beautiful logs! Thanks for watching.
I notice you like giving orders? what's all that about the people that are there helping they know what's going on
The person helping is a contractor friend of mine, who doesn't typically mill with me. Mills can be dangerous when there are more than one person making decisions at once, equally as dangerous when nobody is making decisions and assumptions are made that everyone is on the same page. We have never had an accident nor injury, I would like to think me being bossy helps keep everyone safe! Thanks for the comment, I will see if I can keep my order giving to a minimum. Check back after a few more big logs and let me know how I am progressing.
That is a fantastic answer all the best mate in the future good luck 👍@@WickedWoodsNWLLC
I appreciate you, thanks for watching!
very good
Thanks for the support!
Q: Isn't using a high pressure water wash counter productive? That's surely going to force water into the freshly cut open pores of the wood, and add another like 5 years to the dry time...?? Why would you do that? Why not let it dry without bathing it in water? I've never seen any other person do what you did. Or am I missing something here that only you have discovered?
Good question. There are several companies who pressure wash their slabs to show grain after they are out of the kiln and they swear it doesn't add internal moisture. Pressure washers won't add water through the pores of wood. Getting the fine dust off of slabs that have a long dry time seems to work best for us. These slabs will see three to four years of air drying before they hit the kiln. Thanks for watching!
All these two are missing is curly!!!
They had deep continuing bands of curl. Nothing tight like a curly maple. Thanks for watching!
Just a quick question... Have You ever tried windex in your blade water solution? My Pa swore by it!
We have done windex, diesel, soaps, all sorts of things. Diesel is the best but horrible mess and smell. Soaks into the lumber as the LX250 doesn't have a precision dripper.
perfekt🤠🤝👌👍✌👏👋👀
Kind words! Thanks for watching.
Cool
Thanks for watching! Gotta love walnut!
waw tahat its amazing
One of the many branches from a giant claro tree we salvaged. Stay tuned for more logs from this tree. Appreciate your support!
You have to much wood in your way where you are stacking your pieces.
We have almost seven acres between our two properties and our 3000 sq ft shop for dry storage. Always looks like a mess but wood is always cycling through! Thanks for watching!
You may not know but you're blasting all the natural ils and waxes off and out of the wood.
The pressure being used is too minimal to cause any issues. We only bring the big one out for bark and root wads. Thanks for watching.
You guys are doing more work than that. Forklift is tied up. How do I apply that I gotta. You guys are lifting up too much weight with that forklift to work. your sticker properly. Got too many of them.
Our Takeuchi skid steer is the heart of the operation. What should we be doing differently with our stickering? Thanks for watching!
Thanks for watching. We are going to be milling a large white oak about the same size here shortly. Stay tuned!
Doesn't look like 10 quarter slabs
What thickness do they look like to you?
My video also about wood
Awesome, I appreciate the support!
Este seu ajudante auxiliar é ruim de serviço
I got a good chuckle out of that. He is actually my friend who is a builder in the Portland area. His labor days are behind him besides when I make him mill with me!
@@WickedWoodsNWLLC traduçao
@@marquesjosiasmarques225 Mi amigo constructor de casas. No trabajo duro, porque el jefe para su empresa.
Tudo bem obrigado
Some of the comments are from morons,you dont know the health of somone who is trying to help his neighbor or buddy
Common sense isn't required these days, but I always enjoy reading what people are willing to write! Thanks for watching.
Лопатой почисти
We have plenty of shovels that we use as well as our squeegies. Thanks for the support!
Walnut is walnut.Why do people keep coming up with all these names for walmot, Clara Carla walnut bogus walnut. Come on, this is not the pod industry, it is lumber
Many different types of walnut wood. Different colors, hardness, availability, among other more important distinguishing factors. Pod industry? Thanks for adding your insight, seems very valuable.
@WickedWoodsNWLLC do you have a degree in botany?
I am not trying to be rude, just very tiered
Of all the bs marketing out there.
I am sorry someone from the walnut department has been sending you bs marketing. There are only a few varieties of walnut that have been established for over a century. No botany degree needed to cut wood. Cheers.
@WickedWoodsNWLLC lol
Well so much for educated people.
Thanks for the support! We do have a solution that can alleviate any of the stress that those pesky scientists cause by naming wood. I would recommend watching my videos as some find them relaxing. I'll post my next walnut milling video as black walnut, no sub species. As a respectful nod to you good sir. Cheers.
The helper is barely any help.
Good buddy of mine who is a general contractor. Definitely not a laborer anymore! Thanks for watching.