What wedges do you use Burnham? I like the conical wedges for the first set, then use typical wedges breaking down the rest. Easier to get set, and sometimes you get lucky and get multiple splits, which I think is the design goal, but hardly ever works.
That cut was actually a bummer. Looking at the outside of that chunk and all its brothers I figured they were cracked to trash/firewood. Apparently diameter slows drying and cracking. Maybe round tables then if I coat and store them inside to dry.
I only use the standard steel splitting wedges. Those cone shaped ones seem to me like they would be hard to get seated...but I have never tried one. I have 4, and on rare occasions have had all 4 in a single large round . Like this.
I dislike sawing on rounds to reduce them. I have to do it from time to time, when large knots defy splitting into small enough pieces for the woodstove. But only when there is no other choice. Not sure why...maybe just because it disrupts my normal workflow as I make firewood .
Sawing rounds sucks. It's a bunch of noise and fuel because they won't cooperate in coming apart. I always feel like I lost the game when a saw has to come out to smallify the wood.
My stepson had a conical wedge called a wood grenade. We don't know if was drunk or sober thing but it ended up going in to the wood stove. Could have been stuck in a piece and he didn't see it throwing it in. We used to laugh at him and asked him if the wood grenade blew up.
Wood Grenades work well in harder wood and soft wood soaks them up IIRC. Same with my Oz blocksplitter.
When I have to saw rounds, I know I’m going to. Big and or tough. I saw the log into rounds and roll the rounds alternating in opposite directions, then slice them up, but radially, not thru. Flop flat and chop em up. Cutting across the rings makes it easy, splits easy with the rings.
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