Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Inch by inch, row by row...

I did some wood cutting yesterday but it was in Eaton Rapids rather than at the property.

I was testing out and getting some experience with a new tool, a rope puller.

It looks like the cat's meow for pulling lodged trees down. So far, the best technique appears to be to connect +6' above ground and pull the crown toward an opening. Attaching to the bottom was not successful. The end spears into the ground and will not slide.

In retrospect, the 50' long rope would probably be enough for almost all of my cutting. However, if I need it once it will pay for the extra cost and hassle.

In a perfect world, it would be nice if the levers for actuating the ratchet dogs were large enough so it could be used while still wearing gloves.

I expect it to take three days to break-down and transport the tree I dropped yesterday. 

Priming little brass cups

I ran into a new headstamp, "IK" which is for Igman Zavod, Konjic, Yugoslavia. They have crimped pockets and do not like having new primers installed.

For the record, Republic has very inexpensive SP primers of the SA brand in stock. I have done business with Republic on a couple of different occasions and they shipped quickly.

5 comments:

  1. Seems like a very useful tool. I wonder if, as wear happens, the rope will begin to occasionally slip.

    And, I wonder if anyone has done the same thing with steel cable. Being able to perform long pulls, as opposed to the usual 6 or 8 feet coiling the cable around the hub, would be useful in any number of situations.

    And so would the inexpensive and simple ability to do such long pulls with a powered tool, say, one powered by a geared-down weed whacker engine (Heaven forefend some idiot imposes the limits imposed by battery capacity, despite the ubiquity of cordless tool batteries with which to do so; I have never been able to find that 120 volt outlet for my charger in the middle of the woods, nor discovered the handy temporal extension necessary to achieve a worthwhile charge).

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    1. One of the downsides of a standard "come along" is that the rope or strap loses tension very quickly as the tree moves. Having a longer rope...and 20' of logging chain on the tree end means that it retains at least some degree of tension until half of the logging chain is on the ground.

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  2. I have a version of that tool from HF, and it has a braided wire pull instead of rope. The tool is cheaply made and difficult to use, most especially with gloves. The moving-bits could stand to be more robust, but in the end, it does the job it's supposed to do. It is like having a block-tackle setup already constructed for you.

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  3. Me again: They have crimped pockets and do not like having new primers installed

    First, being from Yurp, I'd suspect they may have Berdan primers (and the corresponding two small flashholes which make it impossible to remove the primer with a single decapping pin). If, however, they are Boxer primed, there are tools available to remove the crimp; I've found the swaging tools leave a better primer pocket than the cutting tools which remove the crimp (those often leave a loose pocket).

    There are tools available to remove Berdan primers externally, but I've found the additional time required makes it a poor utilization of finite temporal resources.

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    1. I am running about 2/hundred of the crimped primer pockets for this lot of brass.

      The swaging tool is a life-saver when processing 5.56NATO brass. Indeed, much better than than the cutting tool.

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