The water is measured by the miner's inch. I'm signed up for 1/2 miner's inch, which is about six gallons a minute, although I think the metering is not very precise. Here's a video showing the flow coming out of the water box.
Here's a shot of the canal.
After messing with the water and running a few hoses, I headed down to the cabin to start work on my next project, re-sawing the sinker log. I had cut it into slabs of about two inches thick, some about 12-14 inches wide, and the rest about 24 inches wide. My plan is to mill these two inch thick slabs into 1/2 inch thick boards that I can use for paneling on the ceiling of the cabin. To do this I bought another Alaska style chainsaw mill from Granberg International, the model G776-24, which has bar attachments at both ends, and allows better control over board width. Here's a shot of the mill on top of the sinker log slabs.
It took a while to get the mill attached to the chainsaw, with the adjustment at its lowest setting, 1/2 inch. But things went pretty smoothly after that, albeit slowly. The 1/2 inch setting seemed to work out pretty well, giving me three 1/2 think boards per 2 inch slab. There is quite a bit of wood wasted, due to the 1/4 inch kerf of the chainsaw, but I'll just have to accept that. I managed to mill three of the slabs in about an hour and a half. I think once I get my system down, it should go quicker. Here's a shot of the 1/2 boards stacked and stickered.
The previous weekend my wife and I finished up the butyl tape flashing on the chimney pipe. Still pretty ugly, but not as bad as before, and its seems to be weather tight. Here's a shot.
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