Hi all.
I’m moving into a new place with a wood stove. I’m looking to get a splitting axe for hardwood. Maple, oak etc.
Any recommendations or experiences?
Thanks so much.
All the fiskars ive seen are junk. Plastic or fiberglass, not rebuildable so they are throw away tools.
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You need a maul, axes are for felling or making small kindling. Honestly any maul will do, i like hitting flea markets or garage sales and finding a vintage one and you can fit a handle you like to it. Also stick with wood handle even though fiberglass takes more abuse, wood is better on your joints long term.
Also get yourself a couple wedges as well, they can help make splitting knotty twisted wood less of a chore and can be useful in any bucking or felling you may find yourself doing whether with an axe or a chainsaw.
Try one before you offer a bombastic uniformed opinion...
I was skeptical too, but using one made a believer out of me.
The weight, balance, head geometry and sharp edge make it easier to use than a blunt maul or wedges.
Finesse vs. brute force and ignorance...![]()
All the fiskars ive seen are junk. Plastic or fiberglass, not rebuildable so they are throw away tools.
If you're going to spend money (fiskars) get a US or German maul with real steel and a real hickory handle.
(The advantage to a cheap maul with fiberglass handle to start out is it may be more forgiving of strikes to the handle).
I heave to agree, best axe and maul for the money.Fiskars splitting axe.
Thread closed.
Try one before you offer a bombastic uniformed opinion...
I was skeptical too, but using one made a believer out of me.
The weight, balance, head geometry and sharp edge make it easier to use than a blunt maul or wedges.
Finesse vs. brute force and ignorance...![]()
If you are any good at GJ you will over complicate things like I did and find an old splitting maul in the shed, find the logo and search endlessly until you know the age and all the details about the company whom manufactured it. Then you will spend way too much time restoring it, driving around to find a proper hickory handle, learning he correct method for fitting a new handle on the maul.....then obsessing about the need for more tools from that manufacturer of the same era as the 120 year old maul you are now using.
Yes I agree, but you sir are different to many posting in this thread, you appreciate a high quality hand forged axe bit serviceable for over a century that is hung with a perfectly carved out piece of specifically grained hardwood. For many here a composite handled mass produced low quality cast Fiskars bit is as good as it gets. Hell I got an X27/X25 and there pretty darn good to be honest. But they have no 'feel', no personality no history and are not a tool you'll proudly pass on through the generations. I nice Kelly, Plumb, Keesteel Keech, Hultafors, HB or GB would be a nice start for the OP. Start with an old high quality hand forged 4-1/2lb phantom beveled head clean it up & sharpen it by hand. And then you'll start to apprecielate a good ax, learn something & have a tool that will always be worthy of owning. I won't say a fiskars is junk as they are not... they split well, have a tough handle that's can get wet and have a warranty. But....
At age 70+, my Dad would split at least 4 face cords of "seasoned, mixed hardwood" (red oak and maple) every year with a maul and a wedge,I have never seen someone split 36” hardwood with a hand axe or maul.
I understand appreciating a nice tool, but I can split twice as much wood with the Fiskars as an old school maul.
I get it. I have a few old mauls that are very old, and still work just the same as they did 100 years ago.
But, if I have a mess of wood to split, I'm gonna grab the Fiskars every time, because it just plain works better.
I grew up heating with wood. I have split many, many cord of wood by hand. ****, my old man didn't get a log splitter until I moved out. I wish I had one of those Fiskars when I was a teenager.
Let's be honest, a maul is a hunk of steel on a stick. There's only a limited few ways to make that different than 100 years ago.
You can swing that fiskars axe with way less effort, and due to the geometry of the forging on the head, it works just as good as a maul with twice the weight. Force = mass x acceleration. I don't have to work as hard to get more done.
Give it up, man. The idea that a tool could be improved by centuries of technology, engineering and creativity is laughable at best. Just listen to all the people in this thread that have never laid a hand on the tool they're disparaging. True experts, every one.

!I think you might be misunderstanding the purpose of my post and the response that followed. I was in no way belittling current offerings by any company, I was simply stating how I went out of my way and probably wasted much time sourcing tools to split wood. I was making fun of myself, but honestly had a lot more fun during the research and sourcing stages of my adventure then any off the shelf product could have provided.![]()
Yes I agree, but you sir are different to many posting in this thread, you appreciate a high quality hand forged axe bit serviceable for over a century that is hung with a perfectly carved out piece of specifically grained hardwood. For many here a composite handled mass produced low quality cast Fiskars bit is as good as it gets. Hell I got an X27/X25 and there pretty darn good to be honest. But they have no 'feel', no personality no history and are not a tool you'll proudly pass on through the generations. I nice Kelly, Plumb, Keesteel Keech, Hultafors, HB or GB would be a nice start for the OP. Start with an old high quality hand forged 4-1/2lb phantom beveled head clean it up & sharpen it by hand. And then you'll start to apprecielate a good ax, learn something & have a tool that will always be worthy of owning. I won't say a fiskars is junk as they are not... they split well, have a tough handle that's can get wet and have a warranty. But....
I understand appreciating a nice tool, but I can split twice as much wood with the Fiskars as an old school maul.
I get it. I have a few old mauls that are very old, and still work just the same as they did 100 years ago.
But, if I have a mess of wood to split, I'm gonna grab the Fiskars every time, because it just plain works better.
I grew up heating with wood. I have split many, many cord of wood by hand. ****, my old man didn't get a log splitter until I moved out. I wish I had one of those Fiskars when I was a teenager.
Let's be honest, a maul is a hunk of steel on a stick. There's only a limited few ways to make that different than 100 years ago.
You can swing that fiskars axe with way less effort, and due to the geometry of the forging on the head, it works just as good as a maul with twice the weight. Force = mass x acceleration. I don't have to work as hard to get more done.