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  1. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    The Magic Stig, even :). Though I do think it's pretty much as Gord described it a year or two ago.
  2. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    :thumbup:
  3. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    Just make your pull harder and faster...it'll pop a good long way then, humbolt or conventional :lol:. Thanks, Benn. You tolerate an old sawyer's contrariness well :).
  4. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    Sorry, lost that over the course of the thread...now I'll say that your method would work even better with a humbolt ::). Agreed, Scott...but I felt the point need elaboration, perhaps unnecessarily.
  5. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    This is certainly true, either by intention or accidentally...though without a hinge as Benn describes, it's a moot point. I can agree completely with Chris here. And as Stig is supporting the method, I cannot argue my earlier position very strongly :). Here Benn, you are most...
  6. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    Alrighty then 8).
  7. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    You were pulling it with power, no? Not pushing. For as short pieces as that, I'd not have thought the face was particularly useful, but it certainly does no harm...faces do not provide direction, hinges do.
  8. Burnham

    What's this cut called?

    If you're going to do it that way, why bother with a face at all? Without a hinge, a face seems to offer little in way of advantage. A snap cut is all it is.
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