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Powerful Log Splitter Built With Safety In Mind
After an accident cut off one of his son's fingers, Nathan Overholt set out to build a better, safer log splitter. Now his son sits safely above the action and controls the hydraulics that lift and split logs, while Overholt moves logs around.
  Finished with Deere paint and decals, the splitter looks more like a factory splitter than a made-it-myself project that started with an old I-beam. Set up to be a stationary unit, it can be pulled with a receiver hitch from the front or back. A protective cover with a seat on top houses the two 5-in. hydraulic cylinders that came off an old crane. Overholt runs the hydraulic fluid through the axle tubing, which acts as a reservoir.
  "I normally just use one cylinder because it's faster, but when we have heavy logs, I use both," says Overholt, explaining that he sometimes buys firewood logs up to 48 in. in diameter.
  Because of that, he added a lifting feature. An arm on one side has hydraulically telescoping forks to reach under logs, lift them up and roll them to the table next to the splitter. Once on the table, Overholt moves the blocks around to feed the splitter, which has a 20-in. wedge he built up out of 1 1/2-in. thick steel. It splits wood up to 42 in. long.
  "We've used the splitter for six years, and it works like a charm," Overholt says. "It has electric start, a pressure gauge and all the bells and whistles."
  Overholt's main expense was the 13 hp Honda engine that powers the rig. Besides using wood to heat his Russellville, Ky., home and shop, and to boil down maple syrup in the spring, he joins other volunteers from his church to split wood for people in need.
  "We usually get to do the big wood," Overholt says.
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Nathan Overholt, 4919 Stevenson Mill Road, Russellville, Ky. 52276 (ph 270 725-0320)


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2011 - Volume #35, Issue #2