19 Apr How to Adjust Blade Guides
Small Hud-Son Blade Guide Set Up and Adjustment. Setting the Guide Shoes. Identifying the Guide Shoe Brackets for your specific mill. Guide Body, fastener bolts, bearing part information
Small Hud-Son Blade Guide Set Up and Adjustment. Setting the Guide Shoes. Identifying the Guide Shoe Brackets for your specific mill. Guide Body, fastener bolts, bearing part information
Prolong the life of bandsaw mill blades using Hud-Son Band Blade Sharpener periodically. Effortless demonstration. Sharpens Hud-son blades and Apex RF profile blades (Woodmizer / Munkfors). Optional: Grind wheel for Apex SL profile blades (Hakansson).
“Attended the Farming Convention at SUNY Cobleskill last weekend. They had a class for saw milling where they had a woodmizer LT40 that you could try. While the entire class was impressed with the LT40 debarker, hydraulic everything, mobility of the trailer, and automation, they didn’t like the price tag. I felt like the marketing Rep for Hudson Sawyer Sawmill because when I showed the class my Hudson Sawyer and how it produces just as accurate cuts for $2,000 versus the $30,000 price tag, they were very interested. Don’t get me wrong the LT40 or any other full hydraulic model is nice, but for small operations they aren’t affordable. Thanks Hudson for offering a great product at a reasonable price for the small operations!” David Dickinson
After David told the King that he had killed both lion and bear; and Goliath will be like one of them, the King clothed David with his armor, a bronze helmet and a coat of mail.
Imagine David thinking (as he tried to walk) “Don’t get me wrong, this is nice but I have a tool that’s tried and true.”
David stripped off the king’s armor. Instead, he took his staff, chose five smooth stones and his pocket sling. The rest is history.
The fact is, it’s doesn’t always take big equipment to get a job done. You need equipment you can afford and that over time, will show itself tried and true.
Call Hud-Son and we’ll help you determine the sawmill that’s just right for your needs.
Current Model |
Blades |
Hunter Single Blade Case 15 |
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Hunter Single Blade Case 15 |
WM132 Add to Cart Add to Cart |
CW Bailey
Client Vision- Dreamed, Designed & Built Tapchan, Sawn with Hud-son, From Halved & Quartered Red Cypress Logs Along With Live Edge Red Cypress Slabs. A Tapchan Is A Raised Platform Used In Central Asia For Relaxing & Reclining Outdoors Functioning As A Table Or A Bed, & Often Has A Smaller Table For Serving Food & Tea And Are Sometimes Used For Outdoor Sleeping On Hot Nights. This Is An Outstanding Example Of A First Class Tajikistan Tapchan.
I purchased your Oscar 18 sawmill on August 1 and I need to tell you how pleased I am with this saw, your product is top line and what a good price also. I purchased the saw from Thick and Thin Lumber in Sabattus, Maine and the staff was #1. I was pleased with the knowledge of owning and operating the sawmill that they showed me, the customer service was great! I’ll let the word out about your fine sawmill and the service I received. Thanks for an affordable and well constructed sawmill!
Paul Muszynski,
Harrison, Maine
I’ll include a link to the channel below if you are interested. I have over a 130 videos at this time with a total of 325,000+ views since January 2017. Here is a brief list of videos:
The 60 has really been working great, I’ve had a lot of monster logs on the deck and producing countless slabs, one western red maple log yielded $2500 worth of slabs. Only took couple hrs. Love the 30″ band wheels. I’ve really got it down running the mill from maximum capabilities to quarter logs to fit TK mill.
If you ever need me as a reference or want to send someone over for demo I will be glad to show it off.
As a sawyer in general I am relatively new to the industry, about 5 years. Over the course of those 5 years I have spent most of my time running the HUD-SON Oscar 60. The larger than normal frame size is the first thing you notice as you approach. On my mill as I presume most of the Oscar 60’s, has a beastly looking 34 h.p. diesel. The fire engine red color pops against the back drop of the trees surrounding my property. Even the sheer size of the heavy duty ground track is impressive. All of this is before you’re even close enough to touch the mill.
After taking all of this in, it’s time to work. On my track sits the most beautiful log, a 52” black walnut, not veneer, oh no. This is an ugly mess from the outside. I know that inside this hunk of wood, that someone had tossed over a bank to rot, lays the key to why I invested in this unit in the first place.
As I tighten my blade and fuel it up, I’m almost shaking with excitement because I know every log is like a treasure hunt. My first cut is very important, so I am taking my time to set my height ever so perfectly. As I engage the clutch the excitement intensifies, as I ease the blade into my cap cut. Before I know it I’m spitting sawdust and envisioning what this beauty has in store for me.
As I exit my first cut, I disengage the clutch and move my mill to the end of the track. The moment of truth, what does it look like? I slide the cap onto a well-positioned forklift to take the top away. And as if I’m an archeologist cleaning the bones of a million year old T-rex, I gently brush away the layer of sawdust that remains. There it is!!! It’s everything I hoped and more. The rich brown color we are all so familiar with, I can’t help but run my hand back and forth across it. The amazing contrast with the light color sap wood only increases the beauty. Of course if anyone is in ear shot I feel the necessity to call them over to see this masterpiece God created. Naturally nobody else cares, at least not as much as I do. “It’s just a piece of wood,” I’ve heard it a hundred times but I know the truth. As the amazement pours out of me, I soon realize the people around me are looking at me like a puppy who heard a noise for the first time. They don’t get it and that’s fine. The select few of us out there who know this feeling, this is probably the reason we all started doing this in the first place.
I am proud to say, that as I write this, I have successfully milled and sold 5 trailer loads of my product to various locations around the country. The joy it brings to people to have a piece of furniture built from a reclaimed log that was destined to disintegrate back to dirt is not easily described. The HUD-SON Oscar 60, looks gargantuan in comparison to most band mills out there, but cuts with the precision expected of a furniture quality machine.