Log splitters

I know some of you folks were talking about adding a table to your splitter. This is what I did on mine when I added the log lift. It makes it much more user friendly.
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I know some of you folks were talking about adding a table to your splitter. This is what I did on mine when I added the log lift. It makes it much more user friendly. View attachment 406543
Did you just use the existing pump and hydraulics and add a cylinder and valve for the lift? I’ve been thinking about doing that for mine. And adding a big table that lets the wood just slide down and either into a pile, the tractor bucket, trailer, etc.
 
Get you some ibc cage totes and toss the tanks. I split my wood and stack it right into a cage tote. Easy to move with the tractor forks and only have to handle it once.

I do have a couple of those laying around I don’t use much anymore since I now have water installed army land.

And I have a couple old metal shipping crates from various things I can use as well.
 
Get you some ibc cage totes and toss the tanks. I split my wood and stack it right into a cage tote. Easy to move with the tractor forks and only have to handle it once.
I'll have to look into that.
 
I'll have to look into that.
It works great for me. The only thing you have to be careful of is getting them too heavy for your tractor. Green oak is heavy. I fill mine 3/4 green. Full to the brim and I can't hardly handle them
 
If adding a table on the side I might recommend making it out of angle and expanded metal (heavy stuff obviously) it lets a lot of the debris fall through so you don’t have to keep wiping the table clean every so often. Leaves a nice pile under the machine to scoop up later. Just a thought.
 
Worked good on this oak. After I split it I checked the moisture. Was all 20% - 24%. So what does oak start at when you first cut it down? Anyone know?
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Did you just use the existing pump and hydraulics and add a cylinder and valve for the lift? I’ve been thinking about doing that for mine. And adding a big table that lets the wood just slide down and either into a pile, the tractor bucket, trailer, etc.
I kept everything but the valve. I replaced the valve with a 2 spool valve. I went with a cheap China valve, so I lost the return detent. Prince makes a valve that has a detent on one spool but not the other, that would be perfect for this application, but the china valve was 80 bucks, the prince valve is about 350 and I'm a cheapskate.
 
Get you some ibc cage totes and toss the tanks. I split my wood and stack it right into a cage tote. Easy to move with the tractor forks and only have to handle it once.
There's a local hydraulics place that sells ibc totes with the side already cut out just for wood storage. I can't remember the price but it was pretty cheap. They seem to sell well.
 
There's a local hydraulics place that sells ibc totes with the side already cut out just for wood storage. I can't remember the price but it was pretty cheap. They seem to sell well.

I’ve been able to find them on marketplace randomly for around $60 complete and in decent shape. Figured they would work well for firewood or hoisting the wife up in the tractor to do work on the house. :D
 
I’ve been able to find them on marketplace randomly for around $60 complete and in decent shape. Figured they would work well for firewood or hoisting the wife up in the tractor to do work on the house. :D
From what I see around me they are all over price wise. Anywhere from $40 - $100 each.
 
Stopped by Rural King today in Morganton and the 27 ton splitter they had was $1100. Much nicer than the comparable Champion one at Home Depot when I looked at it this morning. I probably would have bought it had I already not bought the green one.

Either way, for the price, that Rural King splitter looked pretty decent.

Only thing I really don’t like about my splitter is it doesn’t have a hydraulic filter. So I’ll need to find a way to plumb in a standard filter of sorts. It really should have one.
 
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