Burnham
Woods walker
Only excellent if the ground has few roots and heavy rocks. For those conditions, you need a hazel hoe, also called an adze hoe.
Just not heavy enough for the really tough line work...but no doubt a good tool.I could still use an adze hoe. But I do have a Rhino. Which, sharpened, works really well cutting root and in our clay soil.
View attachment 142714
Not enough levers Ive heard from someGround working tools are the worst. They all suck. It's a bad day when when one of them is your companion.
I see it, assuming there are only 2 pics?first pic no go
its there nowI see it, assuming there are only 2 pics?
Saw will scream and bounce off limiter or 4 stroke. If rakers too low or too much hook, will get chatter. Delicate balance and the window gets narrower in this stuff.Maybe higher rakers?
stig would not approve, he had a 3 strike rule lolThat’s 40 or 50 whacks, 8lb maul..
This is why I wish clutches were sized to accept smaller sprockets for slower chain speeds, but then you'd have to worry about how much torque the chain sees as 7HP and above is already a lot of force at least on .050 3/8 on a 7t rim. The other option is to port a saw for low rpm after having chosen a model with a clutch that works well at low rpm. Or, just use a durable wide angle tooth edge and take your time with each cut. I cut a 24" many years dead hedgeapple log with a ported echo 590, and just had to take it slow with durable angles. I cut it up with 1 chain, though it did get dull by the last few cuts. I'd look into carbide chain if I was always cutting hard stuff.I think the best thing for this would be a 2100 or similar old tractor saw with low rakers. Or a 395 not ported, just a base gasket delete.
Ole stig… :-/stig would not approve, he had a 3 strike rule lol