Thanks for not playing music. More interesting to hear what’s happening, get a better feel for how the machines work. With newsprint paper no longer a big market, what products are made from these fir logs? Is this chipboard, cardboard etc. ? These logs go to local mill or other destination?
These logs are going to the pulp mill! These logs are mostly the tops of the trees or something that has defects that a saw mill would not like at their mill, This pulp is gonna go through a debarker then in to the chipper and turned into a nice clean chip product! Clean chips go towards lots of different thing, paper, toilet paper, more wood products, hog fuel…… lots of different applications from this product once it leaves or landing!
@@wantowski987 I grew up in a pulp and paper mill town. Cornerbrook Newfoundland, where pulp and paper where king, after fishing. In the sixties there were “HUGE” swathes of balsam clear cut and then dumped in the Humber River for processing at Bowaters since Kruger. Humber used to be the largest Atlantic salmon River in the world, it’s not anymore and the Politicians are still scratching heads as to why. Pulp logs all moved by truck now, and as far as I know still doing some processing. The balsams in Newfoundland are small and really old, what you are processing as tops would be the max size. I believe logging much more responsible operation than days past, however still trying to improve image of the bad old days. On the ottawa River where I live, logging was primary industry. Huge stands of giant white pine. With lots of hardwood also. There are places on the ottawa River where there’s 14-18 feet of bark and dead logs of all kinds. Probably take another hundred years to come back... liked your video and thanks for sharing.
What's the loader? I actually prefer loading mule trains, depending on the driver lol. Pulp and hewsaw is what I like loading the best. I think my best time ever was a pulp load. About 5 minutes on the truck and 4.5 on the trailer. That was 20ft pine pulp. The driver told me later he weighed about 108k. That was with a linkbelt 3740 with a 56" Tmar grapple.
Cat 568! I don’t get to load very much anymore! I just fill in where is needed! I was a little rusty in this video lol but I prefer loading short loggers too
Very good operator. Interesting video. Don’t see logs getting loaded very often. Especially from loaders view.👍
Thanks for not playing music. More interesting to hear what’s happening, get a better feel for how the machines work.
With newsprint paper no longer a big market, what products are made from these fir logs? Is this chipboard, cardboard etc. ? These logs go to local mill or other destination?
These logs are going to the pulp mill! These logs are mostly the tops of the trees or something that has defects that a saw mill would not like at their mill, This pulp is gonna go through a debarker then in to the chipper and turned into a nice clean chip product! Clean chips go towards lots of different thing, paper, toilet paper, more wood products, hog fuel…… lots of different applications from this product once it leaves or landing!
@@wantowski987 I grew up in a pulp and paper mill town. Cornerbrook Newfoundland, where pulp and paper where king, after fishing.
In the sixties there were “HUGE” swathes of balsam clear cut and then dumped in the Humber River for processing at Bowaters since Kruger. Humber used to be the largest Atlantic salmon River in the world, it’s not anymore and the Politicians are still scratching heads as to why. Pulp logs all moved by truck now, and as far as I know still doing some processing. The balsams in Newfoundland are small and really old, what you are processing as tops would be the max size. I believe logging much more responsible operation than days past, however still trying to improve image of the bad old days.
On the ottawa River where I live, logging was primary industry. Huge stands of giant white pine. With lots of hardwood also.
There are places on the ottawa River where there’s 14-18 feet of bark and dead logs of all kinds. Probably take another hundred years to come back... liked your video and thanks for sharing.
Mantap bos kayu balak nya salam dari malaysia
Alat canggih....
What's the loader? I actually prefer loading mule trains, depending on the driver lol. Pulp and hewsaw is what I like loading the best. I think my best time ever was a pulp load. About 5 minutes on the truck and 4.5 on the trailer. That was 20ft pine pulp. The driver told me later he weighed about 108k. That was with a linkbelt 3740 with a 56" Tmar grapple.
Cat 568! I don’t get to load very much anymore! I just fill in where is needed! I was a little rusty in this video lol but I prefer loading short loggers too
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