No - but I've got three chainsaws and the tree was still "green". The two smaller ones don't like this stuff, but the larger Husky manages to get through it OK. Mind you, I tool a couple of sharp chains with me on the day and had to sharpen them both again when I got home. I've also got a lump of old gidgee fence post out in the shed - won't be attempting to cut that with a chainsaw. Straight onto mitre saw / table saw or bandsaw with that bit.
Thanks Bob. I use the Wolverine Vari Grind system for sharpening - have an 8" grinder with a CBN wheel on it right next to the lathe. I also turn a lot of pens - mostly from hybrid wood burl / acrylic blanks that I cast myself, but also from gidgee, mulga and other local timbers and burls found around here. Also do a bit of casting Banksia Pods, Pine Cones etc in resin and turning pens and other things from them. I'm a member of a group called "Pens for the Troops" - we make and send pens overseas to serving members of the ADF every year for ANZAC and Remembrance Days. The bloke who runs the group lives in Sydney - he recently travelled Perth to Sydney on the Indian Pacific, and managed to pick up some lumps of old gidgee fence posts at one of the places where the train stops for a Bar-B-Que. They were using it as firewood.
A couple I cast and turned using York Gum Burl and epoxy resin.
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