Awesome idea for your chainsaw. With this simple tool, you can easily cut wood. Watch other videos on the topic of homemade products and inventions on my channel.
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46 Comments

  1. No one has the equipment or skill to do all these metal-working things. This is ridiculous.

  2. I'm subscribing just so I can thumbs down from now on. Show the end result then show the build. Weak.

  3. At one point it looked like a medieval torture machine! I know there are other ways out there to hold logs, but there's no harm in inventing another one if you have the time and enjoy welding etc Quite an enjoyable video. I like the quirky use of reverse filming to make things jump into the hand.

  4. Great, if you're cutting old fence posts. Not so good for 500lb tree sections.

  5. c'est quoi cette merde de tronçonneuse , tu ty reprend a trois fois pour couper 10cm????? lamentable.

  6. 5 minutes of my life I will never get back!

  7. All that work to see an electric “chain saw” how dissatisfying.

  8. So glad I automatically jumped to the 4 minute mark. These kinds of inventions are notorious for turning out to be such a waste of time.

  9. Go to Woodprix if you want to know how to make it easier. This is a good solution for every woodworker.

  10. A lot of these mystery inventions, which are only revealed what they are, at the end, turn out to be so-so, and that's being generous. THIS is a good idea, and very useful. I would make one structural strengthening suggestion.

    The sawtooth angle iron cross bar, needs some reinforcement. Over time, as the log are sawn, with the downward pressure, and vibration from the saw, will begin bending at the 'point' of the triangle you removed. Another piece of angle, turned the opposite direction, and weld to the bottom, should solve the problem. I have a heavily wooded half acre, and cut a lot of fallen and trimmed limbs every year.

    I'm constantly fighting the limbs, trying to put them on another limb, then stabilize them with my foot, while I cut them. Then, I'm partially bending over to saw the limb. At the end of a couple hours, my back's killing me.

    The advantage of you log rack is the limb is stabilized, and the work is more ergonomically position. Safer, and reduction in fatigue/repetitive movement injury; THAT is a win-win, from a fellow designer and inventor.

    Well done.

    You appear to enjoy video effects tricks, (reversing the couple of sections to make the parts jump to your hand); a good 'marketing' clip for this video, and would change from the mystery formula, would be to create a clip showing struggling to control a limb while trying to section it to burnable lengths. So someone struggling, then you forecast you're about to show how to solve the problem. May help reduce incomplete view stats for your channel, (people not watching all the way through, (I saw where YT dings your revenue for incomplete views.)

    I'll have to look at some of your other vids, now.

    You're obviously not in the US, because of the metric measuring rules. What kind of blade are you using on the side grinder, and are your cuts at real speed? I thought it was a thin abrasive, at first, but your cuts are too fast, (abrasives don't like being overloaded).

    I turned a '50's era DeWalt Radial Arm Saw into a fixed arm 'beam' saw for cutting metal in my shop. (The trick to making it work safely is to push the saw head, not pull it.) I have a T-slot table like a milling machine, so between vises, and anchoring like material is set up on a milling machine, I can do anything from rough, fast cuts of water pipe, to precision cuts, like dovetails for a lathe bed. I am always looking for better blades, though.

    The carbide toothed blades work great for a short time. Abrasives are messy, and easily destroyed with a slight amount of too fast at immediate contact, (it blows out the 2-3mm blade, and creates a large half round notch in the cutting edge). Plus, they go away, making them less cost effective. Love to know what you're using for blades.

    Thanks,

    GeoD

  11. That's how the average home owner thinks when they buy what they think is a chainsaw, hilarious

  12. It’s a log holder for chainsaw cutting firewood. There, now you don’t have to wait until the end to find out wtf it is since they can’t be bothered to tell you what it is in the title.

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