My 6yo son watched this as a part of a lesson for homeschool we discussed harvest of trees to produce lumber so we learn about loggers and then the production end in the sawmill. Thanks for posting this!
As an amateur woodworker I watch every saw mill tour video on UA-cam that I can find. This is definitely one of the best saw mill tour videos I have seen. Great work.
Incredible! Watching the whole sawmill process is fascinating. The way the logs are cut with precision is impressive. Great insights into the sawmill process. Looking forward to more content like this. Keep up the great work!
Outstanding! I was thoroughly impressed by the sawmilling techniques shown. Watching those giant logs being handled with such precision is captivating. The video quality is top-notch. I can't wait for your next video. Keep up the superb work!
Most very impressive organization/business for which one has to be very proud of/ or to be associated with. I salute you for your endeavors Gentlemen 🤪☝️🤟✌️🙏🤪🇨🇱
Amazing! I really learned a lot from this video. It's amazing to see how big logs are cut. The video quality is excellent. I'm really looking forward to the next video. Keep it up!
Fantastic! I learned so much from this detailed video. It's fascinating to watch the precision in handling these massive logs. The clarity and detail in this video are top-notch. I'm eagerly waiting for your next video. Continue with the great work!
finally a decent video of a sawmill in action. Well done. I just noticed this is almost five years old so it is well within my knowledge. A decent clean modern mill.
I worked in a plywood mill in the 70's in Jasper Texas. Very similar to this mill. So many chances to get injured or killed. And some did. My uncle lost two fingers, one finger on two different occasions. That way he got to experience it twice. An 18 year old boy went through a wood chipper. The biggest part of him that came out on the other side was an index finger still attached to a thumb. Not to mention breathing wood splinter dust all day. Beware. Avoid this job at all costs!
I started out stacking then move to operating the edger then file room for 3yrs working on band saws gang saw, edger saws trim saw chipper knives ..then moved to circular head saws now im a head Sawyer cutting the lumber I love a sawmill such fun challenging work
@@tomwolf4609 what is the most commonly cut timber in Montana? I'm an arkansas mill hand and we mostly cut yellow pine but also alot of red and white oak hard wood
Great Video, I have worked in Sawmills for 18 years.This is the best one I have seen to date that explains everything. Good Job! How many GoPros gave their live for filming of this?
12:20 Our QC throws a fit if we stack a pack like that. He missed his mark a couple inches left and he stacked the pack crooked. The left side is even with the pack under it but the right side is askew and sitting too far back. They expect perfection from us altho our yard is full of dips, ruts, mudholes, and all kinds of uneven rough terrain that makes the job about as difficult as it can get. We also have to stack 4 high instead of 3 and our packs are all 38 inches tall (was 36 up til a week or two ago)
normally a canter head is only used on massive over sized logs with big flares. they cause a lot of waste and pine chips are not sought after as much as spruce chips.
I worked at a dry kiln and planer operation that used Western Hemlock,Douglas Fir and Sitka Spruce.The boards would be dried BEFORE they where run through the planer,rather than after.
Wow very automated what an awesome mill. I thought the plumcreek mill in montana i worked at for 27 yrs was awesome (it was) but i guess that was 10 yrs sgo.
The existence of this place is very contemplative to me. On one hand - I can only marvel at the engineering wonder of the state. On the other hand.... this is how we treat one of G-d's most precious resources? To kill the plant and have not even dignity enough to touch it as each board from each long is cast into random stacks like broken bits off all the same log into random stores... I just can't help the feeling that this is as wasteful as it is efficient of time: of human life, ingenuity, metal, G-d, all of it. Super cool though!!
Did you even watch the video? People are touching the logs as they pass by. I don't know what you mean by treating lumber with dignity. Do you think there should be a rabbi there blessing it all? lol
The only person in that company that's expendable as the owner the manager the chief executive those people who are dead weight the employees to be the employee should be making all the money
I hate it when people use GoPros just because they can, even when it makes for a terrible point of view. This video is irritating to watch. You can't see anything.
@@noahjones8616 New Zealand has big logging trucks. Gross Combination Masses of around 150-tonne. ua-cam.com/video/YIXoZzfBJK0/v-deo.html,ua-cam.com/video/VrE877Ut0nI/v-deo.html&ab_channel=WillBishopTrucksNewZealand ua-cam.com/video/TIYDVdO0tCQ/v-deo.html -ua-cam.com/video/juUb_ymW3PU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=WoodleysNZ ua-cam.com/video/vlVsWk5pQ0k/v-deo.html New Zealand- Classic Chip Trucking with 8V92TA-13sp.@ 40t ua-cam.com/video/g-BnwyBK5Hk/v-deo.html NZ farmers block been logged,@57ton gross. ua-cam.com/video/jak7pX6qCiU/v-deo.html
This is an uneducated statement. Logging, at least the way we do it here in Canada, is world famous for our sustainability. In 2010, we lost only 0.02% of our forest land, and that is most likely due to urban sprawl. Whatever we cut, we replant and grow back. In fact, we cut trees in a way that strategically helps the ecosystem. For example, we might cut a patch of pine trees and replant with cherry trees. Those cherry trees will then feed local wildlife and encourage a stronger ecosystem and healthier biodiversity.
J what's missing in this picture employees this is more of the Rich and powerful starving the poor to guess that company should it be owned by the employees and that place should be filled with people getting 15 to $20 an hour the company should be making no profit all profits should be going in the pockets of the employees
Trees are renewable and can be replanted. Metal is not renewable and can only be recycled. Additionally, metal is significantly more expensive than wood.
My 6yo son watched this as a part of a lesson for homeschool we discussed harvest of trees to produce lumber so we learn about loggers and then the production end in the sawmill.
Thanks for posting this!
As an amateur woodworker I watch every saw mill tour video on UA-cam that I can find. This is definitely one of the best saw mill tour videos I have seen. Great work.
Do you know what the job title "Lumber Stacker" mean? Or what they do by chance?
It's good. Prepping for a job interview
@@StayDangerousFMsawmill general laborer what I used to put before I became a grader
Incredible! Watching the whole sawmill process is fascinating. The way the logs are cut with precision is impressive. Great insights into the sawmill process. Looking forward to more content like this. Keep up the great work!
Outstanding! I was thoroughly impressed by the sawmilling techniques shown. Watching those giant logs being handled with such precision is captivating. The video quality is top-notch. I can't wait for your next video. Keep up the superb work!
Most very impressive organization/business for which one has to be very proud of/ or to be associated with. I salute you for your endeavors Gentlemen 🤪☝️🤟✌️🙏🤪🇨🇱
Amazing! I really learned a lot from this video. It's amazing to see how big logs are cut. The video quality is excellent. I'm really looking forward to the next video. Keep it up!
Brilliant footage and excellent narration. A very interesting video to watch. Thanks for posting it!
+TS Manufacturing Thank you very much, glad you enjoyed it!
@@collumslumberproductsllc7992 Yes very well done indeed. Only complaint would be the fish lens. Makes it look like all your wood are bananas. :)
Great post indeed!
Excellent video of the milling process, never seen the whole process…thanks.
Wow. worked at a sawmill 20 years ago. this one is a lot more automated then ours. it was also in the 80’s there man. :-). made a man out of you.
There's a mill by my grandparents house in northeastern Arizona that my grandpa used to take me to. I always loved the smell of fresh milled wood.
Wow what a great setup...Looks to have cost a lot to build...Brilliant was a good word to use here...You have a cool system...thanks for the tour...
Thank you peofessor, great video. Good narration.
Thanks for the informative and interesting way of how pine boards are made. Nothing beats the smell of fresh cut pine.
I work in a big timber yard here in the UK. I have to say I really enjoyed watching this footage. :)
Really excellent video. Almost better than seeing it in person.
Fantastic! I learned so much from this detailed video. It's fascinating to watch the precision in handling these massive logs. The clarity and detail in this video are top-notch. I'm eagerly waiting for your next video. Continue with the great work!
This is amazing. Thanks for sharing!
finally a decent video of a sawmill in action. Well done. I just noticed this is almost five years old so it is well within my knowledge. A decent clean modern mill.
I worked in a plywood mill in the 70's in Jasper Texas. Very similar to this mill. So many chances to get injured or killed. And some did. My uncle lost two fingers, one finger on two different occasions. That way he got to experience it twice. An 18 year old boy went through a wood chipper. The biggest part of him that came out on the other side was an index finger still attached to a thumb. Not to mention breathing wood splinter dust all day. Beware. Avoid this job at all costs!
I started out stacking then move to operating the edger then file room for 3yrs working on band saws gang saw, edger saws trim saw chipper knives ..then moved to circular head saws now im a head Sawyer cutting the lumber I love a sawmill such fun challenging work
Very informative as now I know where all those warped and crooked boards come from.
Amazing work on this vid.
A Truly Amazing Operation!
Thank You for The Tour!!
Very nice looking mill. Excellent video!
This is fantastic!! Great work guys!
Excellent video. I was involved in this industry working for Kockums in Australia.
Is it possible to see a tour of the filing room? Can we see the filers change the bands?
Seriously makes you wonder how lumber is so cheap! There is a lot that goes into it! Nice video; well edited. I enjoyed watching!
Volume of product...
well it does grow on trees
Automation. Less than 5 operators in the mill.
This a pretty high tech mill ive worked in some gophers where i promise alot of men worked their ass off for that lumber
Cheap until YOU have to pay for it.....and then when you use it, you can be "disappointed".
An interesting "log view" going through the mill. The automation is impressive and unimaginable for mills a century and more ago.
Thanks for the tour! Interesting to see how it all works.
Lovely superb Nice sawing on the automatically machine,and till the end board are packed for delivery.
Great video, great commentary.
Great setup. Sawmill man. 21 years
Very nicely done video! I found myself wondering how many Go-Pros you "consumed".
Thats funny i worked 27 yrs in a mill in montana and you are not kidding
@@tomwolf4609 what is the most commonly cut timber in Montana? I'm an arkansas mill hand and we mostly cut yellow pine but also alot of red and white oak hard wood
Great Video, I have worked in Sawmills for 18 years.This is the best one I have seen to date that explains everything. Good Job!
How many GoPros gave their live for filming of this?
surprisingly one made it through, just lost a case
Wondering same thing
12:20 Our QC throws a fit if we stack a pack like that. He missed his mark a couple inches left and he stacked the pack crooked. The left side is even with the pack under it but the right side is askew and sitting too far back.
They expect perfection from us altho our yard is full of dips, ruts, mudholes, and all kinds of uneven rough terrain that makes the job about as difficult as it can get. We also have to stack 4 high instead of 3 and our packs are all 38 inches tall (was 36 up til a week or two ago)
Way to app this as well!that's a lot of work to do.
why no chiphead on the headrig?
normally a canter head is only used on massive over sized logs with big flares. they cause a lot of waste and pine chips are not sought after as much as spruce chips.
WHAT A GOOD JOB YOU HAVE DONE PRESENTING YOUR MILL OPERATION.
THX
MIAMI FL.
PICKETS ARE IT ....
Love to see this...
verry good video!!! thank you
Thought that name sounded familiar. I've hauled a few loads of lumber out of there. Probably will again lol. Nice video. Very informative.
Cool camera shots!
I worked at a dry kiln and planer operation that used Western Hemlock,Douglas Fir and Sitka Spruce.The boards would be dried BEFORE they where run through the planer,rather than after.
Excellent camera work!
It was nice to see the end to end process
great place to work.
Wow very automated what an awesome mill. I thought the plumcreek mill in montana i worked at for 27 yrs was awesome (it was) but i guess that was 10 yrs sgo.
Is this for appearance grade product or dimension lumber?
Thats up to the graders
no brasil eu nunca vi algo parecido em produção...parabens a empresa.
Yes queen pop off🤪
Impressive!
Nice video.i like
Can anyone tell me how to clean up and collect all the sawdust??
Brilliant
My main concern is how did the GoPro survive all this
Hello, how much cost completly plant like this?
About Tree Fiddy.
The music is jammin
The double arbor curved sawing edger, a saw filer's worst nightmare.
Steve T a saw designers nightmare too! Been there done that. Never again
Do you produce steamed black walnut lumber?
Wow there are so many things about this mill that make no since, and are so much slower and less efficient than the one that I work at.
Hmm… do they soak the logs down like I do my aluminum cans before I take them in for weight…???😜😜😂😂🤪
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
thats alot of moving parts for a ban saw, get a lot of break downs?
That was cool.
How many Go-Pro did you lose?
nice video
This is a mill who screws the logger! They don’t allow the logger to cut to length for best prices for logger.
Because their saws can select the best place to cut the log apparently. Loggers cutting them will produce more loss.
@@scrapmanindustries apparently you never cut a log in your life, and looked at a scale stick!
Hey man it’s just what they said
We had saw mill with 2 people and a push table. Dangerous and very hard work
your cuting down homes to anmilis
Slay girl boss
*needs 12 planks in modded minecraft*
*setups up entire factory like in video*
*now what the fuck did I need those for...*
In the Sierras, we called those 'pecker poles'.
the narrator sounds like the guy on youtbe channle wolfpit
Good
I live on the left of you
Fordsisea 123
I need Sycamore maple 26 mm unedged board need regular basis
Silvicultura. Saber gerir essa atividade com sustentabilidade ambiental é o caminho para o futuro deste planeta em assuntos de reservas verdes.
So if the trucker can show up during a rain storm, he'll get more money for all the water retained in the log.
FOAM - BR LA USA . HI HELLO . I LINKYOU WORK .
The existence of this place is very contemplative to me. On one hand - I can only marvel at the engineering wonder of the state. On the other hand.... this is how we treat one of G-d's most precious resources? To kill the plant and have not even dignity enough to touch it as each board from each long is cast into random stacks like broken bits off all the same log into random stores... I just can't help the feeling that this is as wasteful as it is efficient of time: of human life, ingenuity, metal, G-d, all of it. Super cool though!!
Did you even watch the video? People are touching the logs as they pass by. I don't know what you mean by treating lumber with dignity. Do you think there should be a rabbi there blessing it all? lol
The only person in that company that's expendable as the owner the manager the chief executive those people who are dead weight the employees to be the employee should be making all the money
I hate it when people use GoPros just because they can, even when it makes for a terrible point of view. This video is irritating to watch. You can't see anything.
Try opening your eyes
@@noahjones8616 New Zealand has big logging trucks.
Gross Combination Masses of around 150-tonne.
ua-cam.com/video/YIXoZzfBJK0/v-deo.html,ua-cam.com/video/VrE877Ut0nI/v-deo.html&ab_channel=WillBishopTrucksNewZealand
ua-cam.com/video/TIYDVdO0tCQ/v-deo.html
-ua-cam.com/video/juUb_ymW3PU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=WoodleysNZ
ua-cam.com/video/vlVsWk5pQ0k/v-deo.html
New Zealand- Classic Chip Trucking with 8V92TA-13sp.@ 40t
ua-cam.com/video/g-BnwyBK5Hk/v-deo.html
NZ farmers block been logged,@57ton gross.
ua-cam.com/video/jak7pX6qCiU/v-deo.html
@@mtl-ss1538 that's huuuge
Man power replaced by robots. No wonder why people can't find jobs easily.
Great vid but damn that music is bad
it is a catastrophe as we destroy forests
This is an uneducated statement.
Logging, at least the way we do it here in Canada, is world famous for our sustainability. In 2010, we lost only 0.02% of our forest land, and that is most likely due to urban sprawl. Whatever we cut, we replant and grow back.
In fact, we cut trees in a way that strategically helps the ecosystem. For example, we might cut a patch of pine trees and replant with cherry trees. Those cherry trees will then feed local wildlife and encourage a stronger ecosystem and healthier biodiversity.
J what's missing in this picture employees this is more of the Rich and powerful starving the poor to guess that company should it be owned by the employees and that place should be filled with people getting 15 to $20 an hour the company should be making no profit all profits should be going in the pockets of the employees
Silence troll
@oneneon1 trolls are dissolved
Good video until the terrible music started.
chill vibe drums aren't so bad man
Sierra Pacific industries mills are the place to be at. not this crummy mill
xX-crazyt94-Xx stfu
There's really no reason to even being harvesting trees everything you can do with wood you can do with metal
Trees are renewable and can be replanted. Metal is not renewable and can only be recycled. Additionally, metal is significantly more expensive than wood.
I tried burning metal in my fireplace - did you know metal doesn't burn very well?