Coupe, As I said, it"s not as fine as it might look. However, there is a lot of real fine wood mixed in as I cut the small ironwood trees right down to 1" size; waste not, want not. Ironwood dies naturally and most never get larger than 6" or so. However, I cut one the other day that was about a foot in dia. After dying and standing for a year, it is totally seasoned and ready to burn. I have about 50 acres of woodlot and I rarely ever cut a live tree. In addition to the ironwood, occasionally I will find dead white and red oak and red maple. As for wasting gasoline, I doubt I burned 15 gals of gas for that whole pile of wood. Granted, about 25% of my wood does not need to be split. $45 to $50 for splitting MY wood for MY convenience is a small price to pay considering the cost of oil, or in my case propane.
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Today's Featured Article - Oliver 550 Purchaser Checklist - by Greg Sheppard. Pound for pound the 550 is better than anything I've seen. It has great power for its size and can really hunker down and lug. Classified as a 3-bottom plow depending on soil conditions. I personally don't think it can be beat for a utility tractor in the 40 HP range. They are extremely thrifty on fuel, at least my DSL is. Most drive train parts are fairly easy to get. Sheet metal is probably the hardest thing to
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