That is some damn cool stuff. Love seeing Buckin cutting wood I would be accustomed to. Dead snags. PA hardwood rocks!!!
@triple6758Ай бұрын
Ol School doing it better than any other channel I've seen. Works safe and leaves nice stumps.
@PlumbBob-FGXАй бұрын
Hi Buckin. A friend put me onto your videos. You do marvellous work, the most educational workshops I've seen. Your an absolute true professional in every sense of the word. I don't use machines with bars a big as your. Nothing over 18 inches in a Stihl, but I've being using chainsaws since I was 12yo. And I say using a chainsaw is the best fun you can have with your pants on. Cutting firewood, trimming trees even using those single handed 18volt micro saws in hedges.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
I appreciate that
@shapeshifter7753Ай бұрын
Great to see you out there dropping em with your fans ❤ thanks for bringing us along🙂 I think I could hear in your voice at the end you had put in a good day💪 all barked up n turning the shower water brown!! I love it 👍
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
😁
@alexmatthews2332Ай бұрын
Holy crap this is exciting these two class acts together no way!!
@joelnash5692Ай бұрын
Beauty old 217/225 jack . Like seeing you cut some black gold buckin'
@InventorAndCuriousАй бұрын
its nice to see Buckin's saw with a little resistance for a change! I may have even heard a few bogs in there...
@robertblacksmith4355Ай бұрын
That old "Timberjack" tractor @ the end was very cool !
@sanchezzz1Ай бұрын
Incredibly cool.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Kool😊
@stephengomme777Ай бұрын
IT LOOKED LIKE AN AMERICAN PIKE MACHINE VERY POWERFUL .EAR DONT LET THE RENT BOYS USE IT THO NIGHTMARE TOUNGUES OUT OF IT DOH!
@DiViLi2Ай бұрын
That old Timberjack tractor is a treasure!
@michaelpatterson6678Ай бұрын
Good to see the both of you together. I subscribe to both your channels. The two of you are masters in your trade.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Much appreciated!
@steveroberson1979Ай бұрын
Good morning Buckin n OL Skool! Love watching you two do ur thing! Mad love n Respect brother ✊️ 🙏 💯 ❤❤❤❤
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Hey stevy
@agkleppel6235Ай бұрын
god bless you both, .........................................greetings from Germany,
@naturundhundАй бұрын
Gruß aus Germany.. Saarland.
@RickGoodson-z7gАй бұрын
It's nice to see ya cutting again I gotta be honest new phone same cracks. Brother you said it conventional notch and back cut unless it's dead I just back cut! If it's a big dead tree I'll take a small notch. Thanks always for helping me learn to file!❤
@martyrutter3630Ай бұрын
Two woodman loving what they do. Walnut some very nice wood to log if you can find them large enough for the mill. 👍♥️
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Indeed
@shapeshifter7753Ай бұрын
Good day Marty💪
@TheHame110Ай бұрын
I was gonna say, I hear hungry rakers a little bit! you beat me to it. Nice sounding saw, Buckin!
@jaredb9909Ай бұрын
Buckin cutting Pennsylvania hardwoods I luv it
@keithevans8155Ай бұрын
Good morning Buckin! Gosh I'd love to run some of those Walnut logs through my Sawmill. Beautiful work you both are doing
@jeffroberts760Ай бұрын
That last tree he took down in the video looked like it had really dark heartwood ❤ the darker the better for me
@timblankemship9698Ай бұрын
Heck, yeah, keep the saw cutting buddy.Keep it in the wood
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
That's the plan!
@davidwybyАй бұрын
Buckin, how would you compare the cutting characteristics of eastern vs. western hardwoods? Madrone comes to mind, maybe maple? I got mostly dead dry hard eucalyptus, mesquite, and coast live oak but sometimes I get travel and get a conifer treat.
@gravfielddriveАй бұрын
Mighty stories of life! You fellas do nice work!
@BrandonBilesАй бұрын
Buckin! Was just watching some of your other videos when this popped up, been waiting on an update from the east coast
@J-Loe14 күн бұрын
I work with a lotta gentlemen younger than me who never think about the guy that has to come later and cleanup their mess. Makes me mental. You’re only as good as how you treat others
@danbarth9421Ай бұрын
Nice cuttin brother, looks like ya had a great time out there, and a humble man ta work along side ya, makes for a great experience ❤❤ love wins!! Lookin forward to the weekend💪💪gonna be epic😊😊much love from the Barth household🪓🪵🌳🙏☝️
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Right on
@Timberjack.loggersАй бұрын
Great video neat to see different terrain and love the ole skidder
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@critterg8493Ай бұрын
Good morning Buckin and old school love seeing you get all barked up
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Hey Critter
@critterg8493Ай бұрын
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith hope your dad is doing ok buddy
@David-i1pАй бұрын
Bucking Billy Brother THE EAST COAST IS GONE!!! Helene has took everything!! Haven't been Abel to watch any videos for Day people have been stranded bridges down, massive tragedy in North Carolina and many more states. Live stock gone historic town whipped off the map! Hope your family is okay I don't know if the storm hit yall but it has been very bad here!!!!
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Mother Nature blowin some steam , be a leader
@David-i1pАй бұрын
@BuckinBillyRaySmith thanks Billy we need more men like you down here for the cleanup!! Going to keep helping and mother nature will do the rest!! Be safe Brother!!
@chrissheathewoodguyАй бұрын
would love to have some of that walnut... I will stop by your booth sometime this weekend. I did arrange for a pravilion (300) to be used as a meet and greet for saturday and sunday. I had a sign made. feel free to stop by. it's for all youtubers to meet up. good luck this weekend. i like how you took the center of the one tree out. I do that alot on hard woods. saves the tree from possible cracks or pulled out heart wood.
@Zebracat5Ай бұрын
East Coast West Coast Shaklank with a clink ,and a clank. Happy Cutting.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Brother
@DevonReeleyАй бұрын
Much love Buckin!❤️🪵
@rakersdownnz19 күн бұрын
Good cutting BBR, more of that 2 stroke skidder please !
@axesandthings483Ай бұрын
No fiber pull. I wasn't sure if old Buckin' had it in him to do the east coast, high dollar hardwood logging but it looks like I was wrong! (ha, just kidding, I never had a doubt) Cheers.
@jirusjirus9322Ай бұрын
Commence my comment in the comments section 🎶 Wish i was younger Wish i was stronger Wish i was wealthy Glad that I'm healthy After all we've been through And to have a tree to climb Maybe two (sorry to be so wishy washy, but it's better to be wishful than be washed up) 🤔 I'd better go wash up, it's time for morning prayers 🙏 Safe travels for everyone going to Bunyan this year, and blessed be the survivors of mother nature's wrath, they carry the burden of the labor of love. May our burdens be few And our labors be true. Love for all all ways always 🌲🍀💚🌿
@jakobrohregger3625Ай бұрын
Hello Buck i have a chwestion were do you get this big wood claws i can not find som for my 560xp Mark 1 Thank you
@alanvanclief7802Ай бұрын
I heard they're using mules to get in parts of North Carolina. Bad in parts of Virginia too.
@lyndonhamby7432Ай бұрын
I joined your channel today from North Carolina today brother 👍🏻
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Thank you brother welcome .
@shapeshifter7753Ай бұрын
Welcome! I hope you and your’s are doing well❤from Ab Canada 🇨🇦
@jaredb9909Ай бұрын
Man that Detroit sounds good in that skidder
@samiam830Ай бұрын
We cut them down very low to the ground almost in the dirt because when it goes to the mill, they pay by the foot.
@davidbulich1254Ай бұрын
I see alot of smiles and it makes me feel good
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Sweet , I like love ❤️
@steely1neverwaneАй бұрын
G'day everyone, have a great day.
@1944chevytruckАй бұрын
AWESOME! CONGRATS!....BE KIND
@johnjay5143Ай бұрын
Naw Buckin', you're the best of the best . You always have the best stumps ... Always . :)
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
You are the best
@JoshSmith-vj3ybАй бұрын
Dumb question, but I'd be curious to know if there's a different technique or tooth shape you prefer on hard wood compared to what you normally cut.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Great question, I’m not sure yet but as I spend more time in these woods I’ll let folks now
@JoshSmith-vj3ybАй бұрын
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith thank you!
@u.sonomabeach6528Ай бұрын
Teaching them trees gravity professor!
@sydrider6023Ай бұрын
The Intrepid Buckin Duo!😆👍
@robertgreen8695Ай бұрын
Living life to the fullest is the only way to do things. When you are doing what you love, and love what you are doing, then it is not a job or work for that matter it a passion and one's true calling. Keeping things simple make life easier. If this is the case for you then you are not squandering your time or your life's energy.
@mowdan77Ай бұрын
Watch out for ticks buckin
@kiwidubzАй бұрын
👍👍
@hariantogesekАй бұрын
Hadir menyaksikan para senior nebang kayu👍
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
😊
@___PK__Ай бұрын
Would be fun to mill that being dry already.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
My favourite
@lyndonhamby7432Ай бұрын
Good video Buckin 👍🏻👍🏻
@charlesmullins3238Ай бұрын
Nothing compares to the ol super leaner3000 with cave in whippersnapper undercut on that alder….ive swung a many and can tell you brother that was infreakincredable
@mikepici5553Ай бұрын
Falling plan in affect buckin
@andrewmuldoon472Ай бұрын
❤❤👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@DanDito-k8tАй бұрын
The saw does sound hungry now. You bet Ya.
@mynameseff2992Ай бұрын
Hey buckin great video as usual! I was wondering if you ever thought about selling your own type of pipe for saws?
@fabzacres-blackcatАй бұрын
You must be using a 390xp loaner saw … We are all accustomed to the throaty sounding snap, crackle and pop of your piped saws. While this 390xp is definitely a serviceable unit it’s lacking that characteristic BBR “sound” Bland in comparison 🥩🍳
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
😊
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
I guess that is old school's 'primary', the 390 tool. When the two men are working together, I think Old School has the small tool, and Billy the primary one. Or was that other way around, whilst they were working separately on different standing trees? I'll bet, a dollar to a dime, that old school picks up a larger and smaller saw interchangeably. It would be interesting to get his view on his method in that regard. My hunch is that both his Oregon bars, larger and smaller were carefully selected too. Curious to know if Billy inserted the long bar himself, or if it's standard method for the PA woods man.
@gunr44Ай бұрын
Hey buckin how did you like running that 390, i run several of them but they are ported and piped. Really liked the old skidder. Great video
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
The 90 has a great reputation . not my flavour . But a great saw
@stephenreiner1523Ай бұрын
Lot of hardwood there.
@HolzhauerMVАй бұрын
nice work
@foreverendeavors6210Ай бұрын
Say Brother, i have an old yellow McCulloch saw i found in me barn, i know you like em per yer channel 😉, how can i send it to you?
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
That’s very kind of you, but I will gratefully and humbly decline 😊 thx
@shapeshifter7753Ай бұрын
That’s very kind of you friend. I believe Tinman takes donation saws n stuff. If ya don’t know He’s a good guy🙂
@foreverendeavors6210Ай бұрын
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith 10-4 Brother, keep up the great content. Love it!
@foreverendeavors6210Ай бұрын
@shapeshifter7753 I think I'll get er running, just found it and knew Buckin was a fan..
@foreverendeavors6210Ай бұрын
Old model 47 from the 50's
@pekerja27Ай бұрын
Good 😮, 💪👍
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
That's why I presume you had to tickle away at the Walnut, prior to making the rakers suitable for your hardwood density (and yeah, dried out hardwood as I've learned from dabbling somewhat with a bit of stock air dried for three years, moreso). That timber when it's alive and moist is super heavy though, that's the other thing. Hardwood that's dry is tough, but it cuts and it's really nice sawn up. Amazing material, and different to any pine. Moist hardwood, still green and standing up out of the ground on it's roots and base . . . just think lead weight or similar. If you're trunk isn't hollowed or something. That's where I think you're be glad of your 592, even with the thirst for fuel (halfways through that green hardwood stump, with your 592 you're like say'in, life is pretty good right now). Not that the 70cc won't do it, the fact is is that it will. But one also has to addup minutee, and equate that to other things, such as gain or loss of more control. 70cc engines buy you more minutes, but also gobble up those minutes, in 'getting it done'. Plus more minutes contributes to more cutting time, contributes to chain wear. This is why I keep thinking, hardwood is a two tool, not a single tool (a one-two, not a straight upper cut). A small saw that lasts, and takes the time that the bigger saw's chain is exposed away from it. And the larger saw reduces minutes too, which maintains readiness for the smaller tool. It's a one-two.
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
I was just going back in my mind to that hardwood, three years air drying, I only put saws into it as recently as last weekend. Here's the thing about dried out hardwoods. Surprisingly, while it was 'hard' timber make no mistake, it wasn't as difficult to deal with as I had expected. To contrast, I would say that wet, green, live hardwood is tougher 'but' with green live hardwoods there as some tiny bit of 'give' in the wood. With dried hardwood, because it loses weight etc, is actually okay to work with from a saw milling point of view. Hence why carpenters etc can deal with dried hardwoods for second fix joinery etc. Using their tungsten carbide toothed blades. There's actually zero 'give' with a properly dried (or standing 'dead'), hardwood timber. Here is my argument.
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
You go back to January 2020, Ironhorse has an episode in which he talked about 'pin count' on chainsaw rim sprocket components. And back in those days, judging by any of Ironhorse's content, Ironhorse was talking about ash, maple, oak, alder eastern hardwoods and eastern cutting methodology. It's interesting the number of times that Ironhorse makes direct reference to chain tension and sprocket maintenance. This is my point about those rakers that Billy is talking about in the dying Walnut tree stands. What really happens with dried out hardwood, because there is zero 'give' in it at the tooth when cutting through it. That all transfers diretly 'back' to the pins on your sprocket. Especially with the dried out hardwood. Softwoods will do it to some extent too, send the stresses and strains back right to the sprocket components. But not to the same extent as stuff like this Walnut.
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
Go back a year prior in 2019, and Ironhorse had a piece called 'How a chip is made', which further delves into skip chain, chain speed, sprocket pin count and he discusses the different types of chips, or chunks that will exit from cutting different kinds of eastern hardwoods. Over and out.
@academicmailbox7798Ай бұрын
Another odd thing (delving into Ironhorse archive circa 2019 -ish), Ironhorse would mention his preference to the bar with some weight, in working on his hardwoods. What that does, is yes a heavier bar does add more weight 'to have to carry', however it also absorbs some more of that jolt or shockwave that otherwise travels all of the ways back to one's sprocket (and thereby probably robs one of horsepower). I did note something else, Ironhorse did discuss the idea of lifting his chain somewhat off of his bar in the cutting process. As opposed to the chain applying it's pressure into his bar (Total, super bar type). And in terms of sharpening he was aware of another thing, he'll almost weaken his top plate somewhat to slice out chips in summertime, by adjustment of the filing angle. Or do the opposite, make the top plate stronger in the winter time in frozen maple cutting (and go back to full house). Furthermore he'll not use full skip for bucking, but just for felling any season. That's a thing I wouldn't overlook though, is the heavier, stronger bars occassionally. Mind you Ironhorse did talk about his 24 inch bar dimension, paired to his refurbished 365 tools etc. No longer than that, so he is different in style of operation to Billy too.
@AlexhulkАй бұрын
Good stuff ❤
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Alex😊
@d.ahwooomazenkas8075Ай бұрын
AHWOOOO GET ONE 👍❤️🌲
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Lol😊
@jayminer9416Ай бұрын
Wish you were closer, my son could use a lesson or 2 from you my friend.
@BuckinBillyRaySmithАй бұрын
Is he teachable, brother. Takes a village friend, love ya
@jayminer9416Ай бұрын
@@BuckinBillyRaySmith He is VERY teachable. He bought his own gaffs and saddle recently and has been practicing climbing.