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Chainsaw users help please!

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I have developed an arrangement with our roofer - when he takes down trees for access, or removes spars or lats from a roof, he drops them off with the nearest person he knows with a woodburner, rather than tip them. This week I have been given a couple of newly felled fruit trees and a heap of 300 year old roof timbers for my woodburner. :dance:

 

 

Now I need a way to cut them up. :think:

 

I know one or two Omleteers have chainsaws - can you advise me please? Petrol or electric? New or secondhand? What length of blade do I need? And what safety equipment to prevent me from cutting off parts of my anatomy rather than just chopping up the wood? :shock::oops:

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Chainsaw expert here! :D

 

If you're doing lots of heavy sawing then you'll need a petrol one, an electric one with a decent motor and blade/chain will be fine for small and medium jobs. The chains can be sharpened for about £6 a time and done 5 times before you need a new chain, which can cost £15-20.

 

You will also need a workmate or saw horse and all the protective gubbins to go with it... gauntlets, goggles, boots, earplugs and thick trousers.

 

DO NOT do what I do and chainsaw in your bikini... it' far easier to get clean, but not at all safe as I am always being reminded (I do wear my gauntlets and goggles though :D

 

I'd suggest that you hire one first to get the hang opf it and see if it's something that you want to get into; not everyone is happy using a chainsaw.

 

I'm sure that you know this, but any felled tree wood will need to season for at least a year before you can burn it.

 

I now have a whole winter's stock on my woodpile, thanks to friends, scabbing from skips and Freecycle :D

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i use a Reciprocating Saw at work for cutting window frames out it cope with wood up to 4 inch i've cut branches and small trees up to about 6inch but you'll need to chance the blades quite offten but a lot safer than a chain saw on old beams with hidden metal in them

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I honestly think if you've never used one before, it might be safer (and cheaper) to try and find someone local who already has one, and get them to saw the trees up. If you used a chainsaw in a work environment, you wouldn't be allowed near it without a training course and proper safety gear - I say this because I have a friend who works in woodland, and she has been trained to use one. She would definitely not recommend them for novices.

 

As far as the roof-timbers and any other wood are concerned, I just use a good old handsaw, cost about £9.99. It keeps me warm in the winter while I'm chicken-supervising, and it's fantastic for losing weight, I couldn't believe how it peeled off when I spent an hour sawing every Saturday and Sunday!

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Thanks all - as always you are a great source of advice and common sense!

 

I am not about to rush out and buy one, and I have used one at work (although that was 20 years ago and only briefly) I am cautious about the safety issues. I will have a look at reciprocating saws too, are they just like a powered back-and-forth action?

 

I have a good handsaw in the garage and plan to start out with that - it will cope fine with the seasoned timbers and branches (some have been dead for well over a year!), it is the 'green' tree trunks that were worrying me. Olly makes a good point though - it'll be good exercise and I could do with that!

 

 

and Claret - I don't even own a bikini, so no danger of chainsawing in one.... :shock::shameonu:

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Chainsaw expert here! :D

 

 

DO NOT do what I do and chainsaw in your bikini... it' far easier to get clean, but not at all safe as I am always being reminded (I do wear my gauntlets and goggles though :D

 

:lol::lol:

My hubby chainsaws our wood up wearing shorts and sandals. No head protection at all.

Daft beggar won't listen to me. :roll::roll:

You can sharpen your own chain with a special file that costs very little.

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Chainsaw expert here! :D

 

 

DO NOT do what I do and chainsaw in your bikini... it' far easier to get clean, but not at all safe as I am always being reminded (I do wear my gauntlets and goggles though :D

 

:lol::lol:

My hubby chainsaws our wood up wearing shorts and sandals. No head protection at all.

Daft beggar won't listen to me. :roll::roll:

You can sharpen your own chain with a special file that costs very little.

 

 

My hubby does this for his work and would NEVER cut anything without the chainsaw trousers protection, helmet, boots, earmuffs and facial protection . Its just not worth the risk! He has a saw with heated handles too!

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