logmaker

A device that creates 'logs' out of burnable waste; the device encases the burnable waste within a newspaper wrapping by the use of a special tube and plunger.

Noun

  1. A device that creates 'logs' out of burnable waste; the device encases the burnable waste within a newspaper wrapping by the use of a special tube and plunger.
    • The Advertising Standards Authority concluded that the complaint was justified, noting that under the Act, authorisation for fuels produced by the "logmaker" would be unlikely since manufacture could not be controlled...
    • You need to soak the paper in water, squash it into the logmaker and squeeze down the handles. - 2011, Natalia Marshall, Save the planet: 52 brilliant ideas for rescuing our world, →ISBN, page 93:
    • In fact nowadays, you can buy hand-cranked log-makers that will compact your newspapers, which are also cellulose, into handy burnable briquettes -- useful if you are miles from recycling facilities. - 2012, Colin...
  2. One who cuts trees at a tree farm and prepares logs for further processing; lumberman.
    • So, on the alert for any sound which might enable him to locate logmaker or roadcutter who would put him on the track of Angus, he tramped along and it was not long before his attention was rewarded. - 1922, Canada...
    • Log making exhibited a workload which could be classified as moderate to heavy because the logmaker used a chainsaw on the landing. - 1993, John Galbraith, Managing New Zealand's Forests for Future Markets:
    • A poor logmaker who managed to achieve 70% of the optimum would be loosing^([sic]) $60 per tree which is $30 per tonne or $18,000 per hectare. - 1997, Woodlot Logging:

Origin

From log + maker.

Forms

logmakers