steamin
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- Joined
- Aug 25, 2009
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Picture #1 & #2 are overall views of what my wife and I display at steam and tractor shows across North Carolina and adjacent states. The i/4 scale sawmill is based on the construction articles that ran in ModelTech magazine many years ago. Castings were not available for the various components. So I pre-machined CRS stock and TIG welded the pieces together and then machined the assembly as if it where a casting. The main frame is made of donated black walnut wood. The main frame breaks down into three 5" sections that stack on top of each other. The center section has wheels on it so the whole rig can be pulled in and out of the trailer. The husk frame and carriage were made of cherry. The carriage has four heads blocks. We can cut a log 4"-5" in diameter by 5' long. Anything larger in diameter has to be quarter sawn. I am using a Frued 12" diameter, 24 tooth thin kerf rip blade. The sawmill was constructed back in 2000-2001, about 3 years after I had finished a 1/4 scale CASE 65. We needed something for the little steamer to do and the sawmill was perfect. The 1/4 scale CASE had to be sold for personal reasons,but I did invest in castings for a 1/3 scale CASE 65. That is what you see in the foreground. The 1/3 CASE was completed in April of 2009.
Picture #3 is a bit of a close up of the CASE and water wagon. The water wagon is actually cherry wood that was cut on our sawmill at a show in Ohio in 2004. We raided the slab pile of a full size sawmill at the show and came up with a lot of great pieces to cut on our mill.
The pictures were taken this past weekend at the Farm Days show at the Boys & Girls Home at Lake Waccamaw, NC. It was our first show of the season.
Anyway, thought maybe some of you might be interested in some slightly larger models.
Picture #3 is a bit of a close up of the CASE and water wagon. The water wagon is actually cherry wood that was cut on our sawmill at a show in Ohio in 2004. We raided the slab pile of a full size sawmill at the show and came up with a lot of great pieces to cut on our mill.
The pictures were taken this past weekend at the Farm Days show at the Boys & Girls Home at Lake Waccamaw, NC. It was our first show of the season.
Anyway, thought maybe some of you might be interested in some slightly larger models.


