countrryboy
Well-Known Member
Well said above was, on both posts.
Oregon files are not wot they used to be.
Must admit I made a complete aunt of a chain the other day, 80 rubs it got yesterday alone and still like holding on to a f**king machine gun.
Found a slightly damaged but newish chain in bottom off piece bag, cutting rubbish thought I'd give rakers an extra rub with flat file before having a go after I sharpened it, forgetting a brand new sharp flat file.
Dunno wot I was thinking
had to sharpen half the chain away just to try an hold on to the bloody thing.
Every day is as school day, althou I don't expect to be making school boy errors when I really should know better!!
Moral of story go easy on rakers and use proper guides to get them right, does make a saw quite unsafe if there too low.
No idea about the science of chains and grinders but I do think it makes hem harder to sharpen.
Very few harvester boys even attempt to touch up adull chain by hand now if machine sharpened, u now get automatic grinders do it all themselves, move the chain on and alter grinder angle, but just doing it in 1 hit.
A few folk started businesses just sharpening harvester chains on these fancy new auto grinders
Talking about the chrome, glass used to always be the worst thing to hit, sometimes would strip the chrome right of a cutter
I'm actually buying 2nd hand chains off a cutter who has stopped bothering to sharpen his small saw chains, ( 18- 20") running that new husky X cut chain or 325 Pico ( 325 but 1.3mm/050 guage)
I buy the husky stuff new of local dealer new and it's not bad to sharpen, but he uses Oregon stuff ( think 95?) and it is a bugger to sharpen that 1st time
After that not so bad
Oregon files are not wot they used to be.
Must admit I made a complete aunt of a chain the other day, 80 rubs it got yesterday alone and still like holding on to a f**king machine gun.
Found a slightly damaged but newish chain in bottom off piece bag, cutting rubbish thought I'd give rakers an extra rub with flat file before having a go after I sharpened it, forgetting a brand new sharp flat file.
Dunno wot I was thinking
had to sharpen half the chain away just to try an hold on to the bloody thing.Every day is as school day, althou I don't expect to be making school boy errors when I really should know better!!
Moral of story go easy on rakers and use proper guides to get them right, does make a saw quite unsafe if there too low.
No idea about the science of chains and grinders but I do think it makes hem harder to sharpen.
Very few harvester boys even attempt to touch up adull chain by hand now if machine sharpened, u now get automatic grinders do it all themselves, move the chain on and alter grinder angle, but just doing it in 1 hit.
A few folk started businesses just sharpening harvester chains on these fancy new auto grinders
Talking about the chrome, glass used to always be the worst thing to hit, sometimes would strip the chrome right of a cutter
I'm actually buying 2nd hand chains off a cutter who has stopped bothering to sharpen his small saw chains, ( 18- 20") running that new husky X cut chain or 325 Pico ( 325 but 1.3mm/050 guage)
I buy the husky stuff new of local dealer new and it's not bad to sharpen, but he uses Oregon stuff ( think 95?) and it is a bugger to sharpen that 1st time
After that not so bad
