Real hardwood flooring

15 February 2011 kl 12:36

That authentic wood feeling you only get with hardwood flooring...
Tongue and groove cutting opens up new possibilities for wooden flooring, as shown in Logosol’s approach to making and laying floors.

The milling knife works two floor boards at a time, one with a tongue and the other with a groove.
Logosol’s unique tongue and groove cutting system opens up new possibilities for wooden flooring. The floor laid by Mattias Byström is a replacement floor. The spruce boards are 13 mm thick and cut in lengths from 0.5 to 1 metre.

Last spring Logosol came out with a fence for end milling using the Logosol MF30. This equipment makes it possible to produce thin repair flooring sections in short lengths.
– The fence allows repeatable results on each board, says Logosol product development manager Mattias Byström.
He tested the equipment for a new wood floor when he furnished a children’s room for his newborn daughter Stella and wife Anna . The floor is now in place and glazed white.
The floorboards are made of spruce, 13 mm cut in lengths of 0.5 to 1 metre. The boards are laid following a pattern. The result speaks for itself- the fit is perfect in every direction.
This is the type of hardwood flooring that costs real money, which makes it valuable to be able to produce both for one’s own use and for resale.
There are also logistical advantages. You can sell flooring from stock, in lengths that can be transported in a passenger car. Installation is also simple, almost as easy as a click-in flooring system. Add to this the fact that by using short lengths it becomes possible to manufacture flooring from “scrap wood” and create a pattern. It is now completely possible, for example, to make a floor from apple.
The Logosol fence builds on the fact that the vertical milling machine has a carriage that can be moved laterally. This feature is found on the MF30 vertical milling machine. A fence is bolted onto the carriage where the wood is held fast. A 2x2” guide is set in the fence and on the end of it, a little rack to hold up the wood. For larger dimensions, a side fence is required so that the wood will stay in place properly during milling. With the fences and special milling tools mounted, you can mill two boards at a time. Pieces are held in place with clamps, and it doesn’t take very long to end mill a floor for an entire room.


All over Sweden traditional agriculture is being replaced by horse farms.
But a horse farm can be so much more than a place where you live with the horses.
Christian and Therese Sämberg have horses, but their plans are bigger than that.

It is wise to remove the trees that were felled by the strong winds this winter, otherwise there is a danger of insect infestation in the wood.
But how can you easily transport individual trees over logs and rocks?
Logosol has the solution, a smart log skidder trailer for four-wheelers.

In Sweden the trend is evident: Young people become more and more interested in crafts of the old times and dream of a life in the country.
Three of those are Johannes Kabell, Timothy Ohdin and Per Hansson.
They have started a crafts collective and are building a large workshop with the help of their jointly owned sawmill from Logosol.

Tormek’s grinding machines and their method for sharpening edge tools have a solid good reputation all over the world.
Here comes their top model in a bespoke version made for Logosol’s customers.

There are not days enough in the year for Anders Assarsson who runs Svenshult’s Sawmill south of Gothenburg on the Swedish west coast. Even though the largest model of Logosol-Låks frame saw is going at full speed and the neighbours are helping out.
Now, the frame saw is to be automated, with the help of a large circular saw.

”Slice up your storm-felled trees! It is done quickly and you preserve all the good qualities of the timber.” This advice comes from Logosol’s founder, Bengt-Olov Byström, who continues thinking small-scale after the hard winds of this winter.

800 million people live in and of the forest. Many are poor and would get a better life if their commodities and work were valued higher.
Part of a solution was presented this summer in a one thousand year old church ruin: doubly eco-labelled wooden flooring, produced in southern Chile with equipment from Logosol.

Boat building has ancient traditions. Lars Wigren belongs to the growing number that carries the traditions on with the help of an own sawmill.

This year it is the tenth anniversary of the Logosol Sawmill model 7. 
Logosol celebrates this by taking the next step in development, the M8. But what happened on the way here?

The Logosol Sawmill M8 is the new model of the world’s most sold sawmill.
”We collected feedback from Logosol Sawmill owners all over the world,” says the product manager Mattias Byström at Logosol’s headquarters in Sweden.

For the first time in ten years, the wood-processing company Logosol presents a new Logosol Sawmill. The model passes under the name of M8 and includes a number of new modifications. Comfort and performance have been further raised. A new design gives the small sawyer more possibilities for both efficiency and job satisfaction.

Arne Larsson is a man of actions. He seldom regrets anything. Except when he a couple of years ago, cut up a large quantity of alder into firewood.
”Alder is the most beautiful sort of wood in the Swedish forests,” says Arne, who recently built a sauna, panelled with spalted and oiled alder.

What will a boat builder do when he cannot obtain mahogany that is wide enough? He takes his sawmill and goes to the woods.
”In the Swedish woods there are several interesting sorts of wood, like oak, elm and ash,” says Johan Nilsson, one of three boat builders behind the company Båthantverkarna (‘The Boat Craftsmen’ in English) in Stockholm.

Just in time for the planing season, Logosol introduces a completely new machine, which combines simplicity with larger size. To those who are already acquainted with the Logosol range of products this is a long-awaited big brother to the popular Logosol SH230, that was introduced more than ten years ago.

After investing in a sawmill the couple bought a Soloplaner. "A sawmill without a planer, it's like a computer without a printer," says Ronny Karlsson.

John Haag in Sweden has found his niche in small-scale wood processing. With his two sawmills he started a log home factory. His band sawmill can handle the rough logs, the portable sawmill runs the log house molder.

With his own sawmill, Gerard Saulnier can finally realize his dreams: making logs from the trees growing on the family estate.

Eight Laks saws turned a wrecked pine plantation into profitable forestry with record-low investment costs. The alternative would have been to burn down the whole forest plantation.

A new bimetallic blade with HSS teeth has been developed by Hakansson Sawblades. We visited the company and met CEO Olle Bergren for an interview.

The big challenge when it comes to industrial projects in developing countries is to find simple and durable equipment that give high productivity and quality.  Klas Bengtsson in Sweden has made this challenge his mission in life.

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