
Another rainy day, on and off, expected all day. Good for the gardens, bad for some of the projects I have to finish off - like painting the chicken coop - but maybe I can some stuff done between the rains.
Yesterday I was watching some YouTube videos on making outfeed, or productivity tables, for the log splitter. That is an extension table mostly at the backside and end of the log splitter to catch the portion of the log that you need to set aside and split after you finish with the chunk of wood you have in your hand. Most of them show projects made out of metal and welding. Welding is not my forte. I thought maybe I could make a productivity table out of pallet wood.
For reference, I posted this picture a few days ago of my current setup with the log splitter on top of my pallet wood stand...
As you can see in that picture, my split logs end up falling on the ground and I have to bend over and pick up pieces that need to be split another time. For a larger round, I usually split the round in half, and then each half gets split into 3 pieces. The idea of a productivity table is to hold the half of the round that you are not working on, so you don't have to go around the machine and pick it up off the ground. If you can follow all of that, you will realize that you will save lots of time by not slowing down to go and pick up half rounds on the ground to bring them back on to the log splitter.
Long story short, since I modified my log splitter for one-handed operation, I now can hold the back side half round and place it on the pallet stand (on the back side of the splitter) after I make the initial split. So, no more having the log dropping down to the ground after splitting. Nothing like experience to make a person smarter, I also figured out that if I put my Gorilla cart at the end of the log splitter, my split pieces can be tossed directly into the Gorilla cart instead of letting them drop on the ground and then picking them up later to move them.
Here is a picture of my Gorilla cart staged at the end of the log splitter. The log splitter is under that black cover because it is raining out today...
That saved a lot of work. Why did I not think of that before? Well, it's because I have never really split very much wood at any one time, so it was never an issue. But since I started splitting 2 large piles of rounds this past week, I started to think about how to make my efforts more efficient.
In the end, with the one-handed modification to the log splitter and using the Gorilla cart to directly toss in the splits, I really don't need an extra productivity table, metal or pallet wood. I estimate I have another 15 minutes of splitting wood before I am done with the second pile of rounds, and I know it would take a lot longer than that to build a productivity table out of pallet wood. Essentially, I talked myself out of a pallet project.
This morning I finished cleaning up that second pile of rounds, loading them up in my tow behind cart for the riding mower, and driving them over to the log splitter. Since it will be raining on and off today, that might really be good for the grass that was dying under the pile of rounds I just removed. Hope that grass comes back good.
Backing up a few steps, here is a picture of my current setup for log splitting, with the lawn mower cart staged alongside the log splitter. All I have to do is pick up a round from the cart, split it on the log spltter, and toss the splits directly into the Gorilla cart. Almost no bending over required at all and very little wasted effort in motion as I stand in one spot for most of the work. Very efficient!
BTW, in that picture you can see the V-shaped pallet firewood holder I made for the campfire ring, that cedar swing was recently repaired using pallet wood, and I just made that salvaged wood bench a few weeks ago for sitting around the campfire. Someday I would like to put some nice bricks around the fire ring, but right now everything is staged there temporarily because I cut down a 60-foot-tall pine tree and I am burning out the stump this summer.