That was a really good video. I appreciate all the hard work you all do. Make sure you tell the camera operator that was a great job they did. Thank you guys for these videos.
Great job guys! I love watching the logs being sawed but hate that you only see part of it because the camera man can’t stop I one spot? Keep your amazing videos coming
Thanks for another good one buddy. You and Pop did a great job making that beam out of the beast. How long is the trackways for your mill? 45 or 60 ft? I've got a couple frick mills with 45 and another one we just restored to set up this winter and I'm thinking about extending the trackways out to 60 for stuff just like that beam or for 24-28' rafters
It was great to watch you Mill that big white pine log into a beam. We have some timber logs just like it or bigger. Pines, Oaks, Maples, and Cherry I'm told. Our concerns or questions would be with us being on Shulls Mill Road (A Very Winding Sharp Turns Road) is to get our logs delivered to your Mill. At least those of 20 ft. or better for beams. We figure we easily have enough timber logs of size to build us a small home. But not sure how get logs big enough for beams to you. Oh, of course if you would be willing to do the Mill work for us in the first place. Looked as if you have more than enough Logs in the yard to get at. Guess there is a waiting list for having lumber Milled by you. Gonna give you all a call to see how it all works.
Back in the days before UA-cam and cell phones, we sawed 10' 6" lumber. If the customer waned something longer, we told them to nail more boards on. If they wanted shorter boards, we told them to cut off the extra. Our drying stacks were 10' 6".
Before you started cutting that log scaled a little better than 720 bdft 12’x26” =363x2 so that beam at 450 bdft you guys did really well on that log. Good job
Glad to see you walk around behind the carriage to the other side other trying to cross the track in front of and between the saw. This horrible accident happened here in my home town of Lexington Tenn. A man was sawing on a mill much like y’all are running he had a bad habit of straddling the track to set his guide with the carriage behind him with the mill running which he had been worried many times of doing , the mill was 6 in. Flat Belts to pull the carriage and that morning the carriage crep forward bumping him into the saw , the edger man said he had just lit a camel cigarette before straddling the track , he said the saw cut him half into one half of his body fell into the dust hole and the other between the tracks Cletus Evans the edger man said the camel cigarette he had just lit was still in his mouth and his eyes wide open he told me it scared him so that bad he took of running and was half way down mout gilard hill before he caught himself . This horrible accident happened in the 1960s right here in Henderson county. I hope this true story will be a lesson to all sawyers to pull that carriage down to the other end of the tracts if you’re going to fool with the mill running , which is a bad idea to begain with.
MM77 Approved 👍🏼👍🏼……………………………………..I know y’all know what you are doing, but every time one of you gets close to that blade my butt puckers! Nice camera work, you get better with every video.
hi there what a great job sawing .nice beam , best to all john
@@fricknjeep thanks for watching John
Well Done. Hope your customer is pleased.
@@jerryking2418 thanks for watching
That’s become my new favorite video. Good job. Hope to see you next month. Ed
@@TheEddie1014 lol. Thanks for watching eddie. I was close to Pittsburgh this week thinking about yall.
Wow, quite a job. You two really work well together. And what a beam ! Jay
@@jayh1947 appreciate that. Thanks for watching
Nice job! The camera operator did an excellent job of showing all aspects of the operation. 🤠's off to all.❤
@@aporter701 appreciate that. Thanks for watching
Wow, that pine beam is huge! It's amazing to see the teamwork between father and son. Great job, guys!
@@SawmillJourneys appreciate that. Thanks for watching
Really enjoyed this awesome video.
@@WilliamMurdaugh thanks for watching
Great job! That is huge!
@@Ed_in_Md yes it is. Thanks for watching
You did it!!! Got the beam and lots of lumber. ❤❤❤
@@karencary3312 yes it is. Thanks for watching
Good job guys, been awhile anybody cut a log that long.
@@samuelnason8585 thanks for watching
This is the most incredible sawmill video I've ever seen, you two are awesome ❤
@@carlgomm9699 appreciate that. Thanks for watching
Good job ! I knew you could do it ! 🤠👍
@@charlessander5312 thanks for watching
You did it! Yay! That was definitely a monster but you guys tamed it.
Bill
@@williamellis8993 it was a monster. Thanks for watching
That was fun boys, good job, good video
@@georgetarabini6552 thanks for watching
Top job !
@@alanwilliamson2259 thanks for watching
Great video! Probably thr biggest log I've seen on a domestic mill. Impressive job!
@@mikethompson8707 appreciate that. Thanks for watching
One heck of a beam! Nice job men.
@@paulsimmons9579 thanks for watching
Very interesting, thank you!
Thanks for watching
This is another great video that deserves 2 thumbs up .
@@garywhelton9304 thanks for watching
Super job guys, very little commutation between yew while working great team work 👋👋
@@RallyRobert976 thanks for watching
Wow, that’s skill!
@@PhillieGuy thanks for watching
Nailed it!
@@DutchRobbie thanks for watching
Good sawing and good camera work.
@@georgeshotrodbarn2113 thanks for watching
Great job!!!
@@tedmccann6788 thanks for watching
Lovely piece of timber. Tasmania Australia
@@allanfisher8248 thanks for watching
That was a really good video. I appreciate all the hard work you all do. Make sure you tell the camera operator that was a great job they did. Thank you guys for these videos.
@@thomash6496 will do. Thanks for watching
That is a WHOPPER DADDY timber,good work!!
@@phillipreams8239 thanks for watching
That's impressive, always amazed how Andruw can gently turn those logs with the forks. Good job, take care
@@frickcirclesaw thanks for watching
wow nice
@@tomtrees58 thanks for watching
Great job guys! I love watching the logs being sawed but hate that you only see part of it because the camera man can’t stop I one spot? Keep your amazing videos coming
@@rareaussie6960 thanks for watching
Thanks for another good one buddy. You and Pop did a great job making that beam out of the beast. How long is the trackways for your mill? 45 or 60 ft? I've got a couple frick mills with 45 and another one we just restored to set up this winter and I'm thinking about extending the trackways out to 60 for stuff just like that beam or for 24-28' rafters
@@johnnysharpe3812 thanks for watching. 45’
Probably wanted a ridge pole for the cabin. Have a great day
@@jerrystott7780 thanks for watching
I see only one thing wrong here, and that's I didn't get to saw that big boy. Nice video
@@templehillsawmill1748 lol that’s right. Thanks for watching Shannon
It was great to watch you Mill that big white pine log into a beam. We have some timber logs just like it or bigger. Pines, Oaks, Maples, and Cherry I'm told.
Our concerns or questions would be with us being on Shulls Mill Road (A Very Winding Sharp Turns Road) is to get our logs delivered to your Mill.
At least those of 20 ft. or better for beams. We figure we easily have enough timber logs of size to build us a small home.
But not sure how get logs big enough for beams to you. Oh, of course if you would be willing to do the Mill work for us in the first place.
Looked as if you have more than enough Logs in the yard to get at. Guess there is a waiting list for having lumber Milled by you.
Gonna give you all a call to see how it all works.
Thanks for watching
That was an impressively beefy and long beam your customer wanted. How does your sawmill charge for their milling and lumber services?
@@bwillan we charge by the board foot. Thanks for watching
That is a giant 2500lb toothpick. When I get in a fight I want that giant of a man on my team!....lol
@@arkansas1336 lol. Thanks for watching
Back in the days before UA-cam and cell phones, we sawed 10' 6" lumber.
If the customer waned something longer, we told them to nail more boards on. If they wanted shorter boards, we told them to cut off the extra. Our drying stacks were 10' 6".
@@jbbrown7907 thanks for watching
Before you started cutting that log scaled a little better than 720 bdft 12’x26” =363x2 so that beam at 450 bdft you guys did really well on that log. Good job
@@TheWildWestMill thanks for watching
Great skills boys ! You know how to handle a whopper
@@Eddie-f6t thanks for watching
That left no more travel on the carriage ,used every inch ,Well done !
@@mauricelevy9027 thanks for watching
Any guess on what the weight would be.
@@brianwestveer9532 shew. No don’t really know. Thanks for watching
I just cut two 18'-6" 8x8 and two 18'-6" 4x6 out of one log, and I thought that was a biggin. 😂😂😂 Good job, guys.
Thanks for watching
26 “ for sure will make a beam 14x16 don’t even need to watch lol but I’m going too
@@TheWildWestMill thanks for watching
That's a big ol log Android
@@timriddle3001 thanks for watching
Hello Andrew’s Dad , great job indeed
Thanks for watching
Glad to see you walk around behind the carriage to the other side other trying to cross the track in front of and between the saw. This horrible accident happened here in my home town of Lexington Tenn. A man was sawing on a mill much like y’all are running he had a bad habit of straddling the track to set his guide with the carriage behind him with the mill running which he had been worried many times of doing , the mill was 6 in. Flat Belts to pull the carriage and that morning the carriage crep forward bumping him into the saw , the edger man said he had just lit a camel cigarette before straddling the track , he said the saw cut him half into one half of his body fell into the dust hole and the other between the tracks Cletus Evans the edger man said the camel cigarette he had just lit was still in his mouth and his eyes wide open he told me it scared him so that bad he took of running and was half way down mout gilard hill before he caught himself . This horrible accident happened in the 1960s right here in Henderson county. I hope this true story will be a lesson to all sawyers to pull that carriage down to the other end of the tracts if you’re going to fool with the mill running , which is a bad idea to begain with.
@@Kenny-z9p thanks for watching
MM77 Approved 👍🏼👍🏼……………………………………..I know y’all know what you are doing, but every time one of you gets close to that blade my butt puckers! Nice camera work, you get better with every video.
@@09FLTRMM77 thanks for watching
Good after noon guys.
Maybe he could show us a picture when it is in place, thanks.
@@jacksanders7018 he might. Thanks for watching
448' = about 1700lbs.
@@arkansas1336 heavy. Thanks for watching
What are the plan for the future of the sawmill? Is it going to have a roof over you or not.
@@magicbrowntrout yes we do plan to build a shed. Thanks for watching
As Mark Galicic would say “Boom.”
@@Ed_in_Md ok that’s right. Thanks for watching
You got this made in the shade. S-standard-T-technical-O-operational-P-procedure for S-super-I-ignorant-G-gnarly-N-nasty logs, limbs and trees
@@robertgreen8695 thanks for watching
nice watching but camera man needs training
Thanks for watching