No point in that unless you need long splits for a project or something. Cut that in half and it’ll take a lot less strikes to split.
This reminds me how my great uncle said they processed wood back in the 40's. They would cut the rounds to 48" and split them. They would take the splits and cut them down to various lengths on a tractor pto driven circular saw that had a sliding table to feed the wood into the circular saw. I have seen the saw and its interesting and definitely sketchy by todays standards. The cooking stoves needed 12" splits and the heating stoves handled larger than our typical 16" splits. I wish I could go back in time and ask him more questions about this.