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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

OT/ wood splitter / widow maker

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NE IA Dave

04-12-2007 21:10:03




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Lots of snow and a bad frame of mind today, so wasted my day for the most part, got to thinking of a machine that my wifes grandfather had a picture of.

This was a wood splitter made from a old junk 6-10 hp hit and miss engine. Those are pretty heavy duty, with flywheels that create alot of energy. This one was a junk engine that was belted from a tractor. The flywheel had a wedge welded or bolted to it that rotated between two large chunks of steel. A small table held the chunk of wood, the flywheel with the wedge swung around and clobered the chunk of wood. the wedge fit between the two chunks of steel, but the wood couldn't. The flywheel never stopped so they would walk up and throw the chunk of wood, and run away as the wood gernaded into orbit. Every year someone got hit with a flying chunk, but all wound healed eventualy I guess. Grandpa said it never found a chunk that it couldn't split, nor a skull for that matter. He did mention that regardless of the out come it all happened very fast. Judging by the size of the wood pile in the picture, the dumb thing must have been real popular. One of my first questions was why not have a long chute to roll the chunks down, or at least set a few fence posts to duck behind. Grandpa said yea that probably would have been a prety good idea.

As I think back at all the saftey features we don't even pay attention to.

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paul

04-13-2007 20:54:29




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to NE IA Dave, 04-12-2007 21:10:03  
My cousin in the area (southern MN) here had talked about his 2 eledrly neighbors who had a flywheel wood spliter like that - set the wood in & take cover, the spinning wedge would knock it apart. I never saw it.

--->Paul



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cj3b_jeep

04-13-2007 13:02:20




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to NE IA Dave, 04-12-2007 21:10:03  
M neighbor uses one of those cones where you take your wheel off, mount the cone and run the vehicle. Works good, looks just as dangerous as all get up.



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NE IA Dave

04-13-2007 15:58:18




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to cj3b_jeep, 04-13-2007 13:02:20  
My brother from MN told of a cone that mounted to the pickup rim. It worked real good till he screwed on a real big chunk. He had neglected to chain his truck to a tree, and when the chunk stuck it took off with the pickup. It went down a trail like it was walking on a crutch. I can imagine that would have been kinda funny watching it bounce around, but I guess the two kids sitting in the pickup were kinda scared, but ok.

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Ken Macfarlane

04-13-2007 05:17:37




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to NE IA Dave, 04-12-2007 21:10:03  
The linked movie is big but interesting to watch. A real crazy splitter. A steel tractor wheel on a belt with a wedge in it. You hold the chunk up to the wheel on a table with a slot and the wedge smacks it while you hold it.

The wheel is rotating fast enough to smack though it.Link
20Splitter.wmv>Link



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NE IA Dave

04-13-2007 16:00:12




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to Ken Macfarlane, 04-13-2007 05:17:37  
I can't get the movie to load on to my computer, is the address correct? Thanks



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Davis In SC

04-12-2007 21:49:21




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to NE IA Dave, 04-12-2007 21:10:03  
On a similar note... Something still sends chills up my spine.. 2 elderly Black men used to come around to bale our hay.. They had one of the fork-fed balers, the kind you put the wooden spacers in, and hand-tied the wire. It had a big air-cooled engine on it, probably a Wisconsin. They would start the engine with a rope, then "Throw" the flat belt on, to get the baler running... I have often wondered what would have happened, if one of them had been caught up in the belt... I bet OSHA would have had a fit!!! They were nice old guys, and us kids had fun, working with them..

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NE IA Dave

04-13-2007 16:08:20




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to Davis In SC, 04-12-2007 21:49:21  
I was at a tractor show in Prarie Du Chine Wisc. about 1972. A very large jumbo man decided to throw the drive belt off the threshing machine while it was running. He took off running and pulled sideways on the belt. He stumbled and the belt drug him almost the full distance with his pants and underware around his ankles. He wasn't hurt as much as his pride. It sure seemed like he was showing off as he grabed the belt and I guess you could say the same after he stopped skidding, (only in a different form)

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iowa_tire_guy

04-13-2007 10:05:27




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to Davis In SC, 04-12-2007 21:49:21  
That reminds me of a man here who talked about the Wisconsin engines on balers. They ran great but if they died when hot were impossible to start using the crank. This guy said they would unhook the JD "B" and belt it up to the engine to start it. But they had to put the 4 V belts back on the running engine. I checked and he had all his fingers.



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730virgil

04-13-2007 19:55:02




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to iowa_tire_guy, 04-13-2007 10:05:27  
my uncle had a new holland 77 with a wisconsin engine on. when it got hot it didn't like to start again. i once saw it backfire on him and lift him off his feet. i don't know why he didn't get a arm broke.



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Maine Fordson

04-13-2007 10:56:20




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 Re: OT/ wood splitter / widow maker in reply to iowa_tire_guy, 04-13-2007 10:05:27  
At one of the big agricultural fairs in the western part of Maine they have a corner dedicated to the type of stuff that YT readers love (old tractors/implements/gas engines, etc.); among them is a behemoth of a woodsplitter that stands about seven or eight feet tall and has a flywheel that is at least three feet in diameter. On either side of the flywheel are cranks and shads that drive wedges down toward small round splitting blocks.

third party image

The stove length is stood on end, tilting outward, and then when the flywheel turns and takes the wedge up, the wood is tipped inward. When the wedge comes back down, the wood is split. Works great! Definitely not an OSHA-approved device, though.

-- Maine Fordson

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