SouthSoundTree-
TreeHouser
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2014
- Messages
- 4,941
Adding captions now...
Jed asked for a play by play on stacking three wedges for a hard back-leaner. I used this technique the other day to pound over a backleaning Doug-fir, a great hinging tree. I've pounded over dead backleaners a bunch at State Parks.
Basic face cut. Bore through face-cut on your horizontal plane of the conventional facecut, coming out the back. This is your top slot.
Shave off bark to see what you're doing. I do this a lot at hinges, and it helps your bar reach across when you remove 3-4" of bark between the two sides.
Bore from back-cut toward face-cut, approximately 3/8-1/2" below the top slot. This is the middle slot.
Drop down another fraction of an inch, boring horizontally, below the middle slot.
Insert three medium wedges that are in good condition (not overly mushroomed or missing tips.
Set wedges firmly, getting some compression in the wood. Listen to the pounding, and feel the rebound off the wedges. Alternate wedges, so they all sink equally, essentially.
Cut one side of the back-cut. Make sure that there is not an uncut strip between the wedge and the kerf from the nose of your bar. Establish the hinge on that side. Bang wedges a bit. Listen, feel. Cut the the other remaining holding wood on the other side of the back-cut. Put away the saw. Get your wedge pounder ready.
Shear off a wedge. Oops.
Beat them wedges. Get away from the stump. Don't stop and take pictures!
after
after
Jed asked for a play by play on stacking three wedges for a hard back-leaner. I used this technique the other day to pound over a backleaning Doug-fir, a great hinging tree. I've pounded over dead backleaners a bunch at State Parks.
Basic face cut. Bore through face-cut on your horizontal plane of the conventional facecut, coming out the back. This is your top slot.

Shave off bark to see what you're doing. I do this a lot at hinges, and it helps your bar reach across when you remove 3-4" of bark between the two sides.
Bore from back-cut toward face-cut, approximately 3/8-1/2" below the top slot. This is the middle slot.
Drop down another fraction of an inch, boring horizontally, below the middle slot.

Insert three medium wedges that are in good condition (not overly mushroomed or missing tips.
Set wedges firmly, getting some compression in the wood. Listen to the pounding, and feel the rebound off the wedges. Alternate wedges, so they all sink equally, essentially.

Cut one side of the back-cut. Make sure that there is not an uncut strip between the wedge and the kerf from the nose of your bar. Establish the hinge on that side. Bang wedges a bit. Listen, feel. Cut the the other remaining holding wood on the other side of the back-cut. Put away the saw. Get your wedge pounder ready.

Shear off a wedge. Oops.

Beat them wedges. Get away from the stump. Don't stop and take pictures!

after

after
