Jim
July 28th, 2012, 04:06 PM
It's been a low burn project for a while now... to have a somewhat lightweight, somewhat compact saw to cut downed trees for easy removal.
It came to be a project after dealing with a few trees - and how long it can take to chop or saw one down to removal size*. The bow saw is good for limbs, but beyond that size, it (and the operator, me) is lacking.
A cordless electric chain saw is produced but it has a cost prohibitive price.
I kept thinking of making an electric unit from an old starter motor (12vDC readily available) and a broken gasoline chainsaw. That idea just stayed in mind for a while until family wanted to remove several trees from their yard. We looked at renting a chainsaw as well as to buy a saw. In the end we decided a small electric unit would fit the bill (it did, perfectly) and be a better value than renting. Two electric units were available and I chose the smaller of the two with the thought I could use it in the jeep with an inverter. The Homelite 14" chainsaw motor is rated 9.0amps / ~1050watts. With the motor's startup load in mind, I kept looking for a suitably sized inverter.
The last piece of the puzzle, the 1500watt continuous / 3000watt surge inverter, fell into place this week and today was an initial test. The inverter didn't beep/complain when the saw was turned on nor did it beep/complain cutting through a simple 2x3. So far so good but a full scale tree test is yet to happen.
* DrOldUnit / Rob cranked with crazy good endurance on a large tree on Rock Creek a few months back.
Getting ready for spring runs through deadfall tree'd forests...
http://www.jimwilliamson.net/automobile/frontrange4x4-pix/chainsaw-inverter.jpg
It came to be a project after dealing with a few trees - and how long it can take to chop or saw one down to removal size*. The bow saw is good for limbs, but beyond that size, it (and the operator, me) is lacking.
A cordless electric chain saw is produced but it has a cost prohibitive price.
I kept thinking of making an electric unit from an old starter motor (12vDC readily available) and a broken gasoline chainsaw. That idea just stayed in mind for a while until family wanted to remove several trees from their yard. We looked at renting a chainsaw as well as to buy a saw. In the end we decided a small electric unit would fit the bill (it did, perfectly) and be a better value than renting. Two electric units were available and I chose the smaller of the two with the thought I could use it in the jeep with an inverter. The Homelite 14" chainsaw motor is rated 9.0amps / ~1050watts. With the motor's startup load in mind, I kept looking for a suitably sized inverter.
The last piece of the puzzle, the 1500watt continuous / 3000watt surge inverter, fell into place this week and today was an initial test. The inverter didn't beep/complain when the saw was turned on nor did it beep/complain cutting through a simple 2x3. So far so good but a full scale tree test is yet to happen.
* DrOldUnit / Rob cranked with crazy good endurance on a large tree on Rock Creek a few months back.
Getting ready for spring runs through deadfall tree'd forests...
http://www.jimwilliamson.net/automobile/frontrange4x4-pix/chainsaw-inverter.jpg