Posted: Sat Jun 28, 2014 2:00 pm
The most logical tool for milling railroad ties is IMHO a chain saw!;)
A woodworking forum for woodworking hobbyist and woodworking projects related and unrelated to the Shopsmith MARK V
https://forum.shopsmith.com/
That seems like a problem regardless of what is used to cut them. Cannot their entry point be seen from the end?Ed in Tampa wrote:Careful many railroad ties have a S shaped metal split reducer pressed into them. Some are buried as much as 6 inches in from the end. Most ties that have them have one end where the S is horizontal and the other end has an vertical S.
The ones I have seen are made from what looks to be 1/4 cast iron about 1 to 3 inches wide and occupy the center half to 3/4's of the end grain.
Hit one of these with your chain saw and I can almost guarantee it will ring your bell.
You're right]much[/B] prefer to hit a piece of metal with my TS or BS than a chain saw. I've had surprises with both and the chainsaw is far more difficult to tame in such situations.JPG40504 wrote:The most logical tool for milling railroad ties is IMHO a chain saw!]
Yep. And a chainsaw is (IMHO) more dangerous than running your table saw or band saw without any safety guards and without push sticks, feather boards, etc. Especially for cutting half-laps.
And embedded metal is a serious danger
Right, and sometimes a piece of spike, and occasionally (rarely, but...) other pieces of metal.Ed in Tampa wrote:Careful many railroad ties have a S shaped metal split reducer pressed into them...
JPG40504 wrote:That seems like a problem regardless of what is used to cut them. Cannot their entry point be seen from the end?