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Thread: USA Saw Chain Beat Italian Grinder

  1. #1
    Boolit Master
    Mal Paso's Avatar
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    USA Saw Chain Beat Italian Grinder

    I am finally getting to processing the piles of trees killed by the fire almost 2 years ago. The wood is dirty and I'm down to my last new semi chisel 24" chain. I'd have to take 1/16" off each cutter to clean them up and that won't happen with a file. I used to have an Oregon (Italian) Chain Grinder but they are $400-$500 now.

    Bailey's has a 10 loop special on USA made Woodland Pro Saw Chain going now and 3/8x84 links was $160 for 10. 20 inch and under are all 10 for $100. For Very Good Chain!

    It goes entirely against the grain but I'm not going to be sharpening saw chain again. In a few minutes I'm going to try to throw a chain I used for only 2 days In The Trash. We'll see how that goes.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails wood1.jpg   wood2.jpg  
    Mal

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  2. #2
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    A couple of minutes with a Dremel Chainsaw Sharpening adapter will work wonders on a chainsaw. I highly recommend one.
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  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by jonp View Post
    A couple of minutes with a Dremel Chainsaw Sharpening adapter will work wonders on a chainsaw. I highly recommend one.
    42 cutters? That took a lot of time on a real grinder, can't imagine on something smaller. And you won't find anyone to grind it for $16. Besides I could be casting or shooting.

    I had the reversible motor grinder that put out a wicked sharp edge but you can't go fast. If you "blue" the cutter you've taken the temper out and the edge won't last. The wood I was cutting had granite dust and 2 days of cutting is really good. We have awesome steel now compared to when I was a kid. But 1/16" on 42 cutters plus the rakers? I'm going to buy Really Good Chain On Sale and forget the sharpening hardware.
    Last edited by Mal Paso; 06-10-2018 at 08:45 PM.
    Mal

    Mal Paso means Bad Pass, just so you know.

  4. #4
    Boolit Master
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    I ve bought a couple of chainsaw sharpeners for around $30-$40......made in China ,of course,but although they aint no precision machine,they work well........maybe you have carbide tipped chain?

  5. #5
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by john.k View Post
    I ve bought a couple of chainsaw sharpeners for around $30-$40......made in China ,of course,but although they aint no precision machine,they work well........maybe you have carbide tipped chain?
    No carbide chain, just good steel. Grinders are the way to go with modern steel but you need to be able to leave the burr on the outside of both left and right cutters whatever level of grinder you get. Both sides have to be even for long cuts.

    I'm 66 years old and 10 SCs may be a lifetime supply in addition to the RCs I have for the Stihl 44. Depends how much big wood falls into my life.

    Semi Chisel and Round file Chisel (faster in clean wood)

    Anyway Baileysonline has a good deal on chain. No connection, I've just been a customer for years.
    Mal

    Mal Paso means Bad Pass, just so you know.

  6. #6
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    can't find if they fit a sthil, guess I will have to check the chain boxs I got and see if I can cross match. I know husky and sthil have different sprockets. tried a husky once and spent more on repairs than the saw was worth, currently have a fleet of sthils so cheep chain if it fits would be good.

  7. #7
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    Do what you want, but I'd suggest saving the dull chains as trading fodder, somebody will want them. Maybe you can give 3 and get one back sharpened, if you find the right guy.
    I give loading advice based on my actual results in factory rifles with standard chambers, twist rates and basic accurizing.
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  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master Bazoo's Avatar
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    Are you saying, it costs over 16.00 to have a chain sharpened where you live?

    Round these parts... It cost 5 dollars to have a chain sharpened. The local Ace does it, and several small engine repair places do it, all the same cost for 24" chain.

    I run a husky 371xp with a 24" bar 375 pitch, .050 gauge round chisel chain. I would like to get some semi chisel chains for dirty work, but aint got any yet.

    I touch my chain up with a file between sharpenings with a file. I bought a granburg chain grinder for cheap at a thrift store. It doest have a guide system, and wouldnt do to grind down the depth gauges. I havent used it.

    I'd like to have a sharpening system that would give me professional results, but I really aint sure whats out there. I have a baileys catalog, but aint looked through it in a while.

    Id be glad to pay shipping for a few of your dull chains if you're going to throw them away to up my stock... I only have 2 chains at present, and its a pain sometimes.

  9. #9
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    I was clearing some land for 2 homesites for quite a while on the weekends. One of the driveways to a site was a mile long. I was cutting a lot of oak and cedar. I had a 16 inch saw and would go through at least 4 sharp chains every weekend. I'd drop them off at the local hardware store to be sharpened and pick up the 4 or so I used the weekend before. Once or twice a month I'd get a new bar and a fresh chain to throw in the rotation. I had a crew of 4 stacking as I cut so that poor little saw didn't shut down much. I'd walk up to a 150 foot oak and about 15 or 20 minutes later it would be sitting in a pile. Some of the logs required cutting in from both sides because they were wider than the 16 inch bar. Whan a chain started getting dull it got swapped out, didn't have time to mess with a slow cutting chain.
    On every question of construction let us carry ourselves back to the time when the Constitution was adopted, recollect the spirit manifested in the debates, and instead of trying what meaning may be squeezed out of the text or invented against it, conform to the probable one in which it was passed.

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  10. #10
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    The first couple sharpenings are quick and easy with a file, I’d do those touch ups right on the saw.

    Never have gotten two days from a chain.

  11. #11
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    I have three or four different ways to sharpen a chain, but the fastest is the harbor freight one, and rather cheap at $30, less with the 20% off coupon. I thought the one from Granberg was faster, only because you don't have to take the chain off, and it runs on 12v DC instead of 120v AC, but I needed to sharpen a chain once and harbor freight was closer than my house so decided to get one from HF. I tested it and it ran from the AC converter plug in my truck, and it was much faster (and cheaper), even though I had to take the chain off.

    HF Chainsaw Chain Sharpener
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    Granberg Chainsaw Chain Sharpener
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    At $5~$10 a chain to sharpen one, these things pay for themselves pretty fast.
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  12. #12
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    the HF saw sharpener actually works really well.
    BTW a friend of mine is a tree cutter, Before every day and with every tank of gas her uses a hand file on his chains to touch them up, and he says when they start cutting slow due to wear he has them professionally re ground.
    his statement is 5-10 mins with a file saves you more than that of cut time. BTW his sawdust is actually little ribbons, which he says is a sign of sharp chain.
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  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mal Paso View Post
    No carbide chain, just good steel. Grinders are the way to go with modern steel but you need to be able to leave the burr on the outside of both left and right cutters whatever level of grinder you get. Both sides have to be even for long cuts.

    I'm 66 years old and 10 SCs may be a lifetime supply in addition to the RCs I have for the Stihl 44. Depends how much big wood falls into my life.

    Semi Chisel and Round file Chisel (faster in clean wood)

    Anyway Baileysonline has a good deal on chain. No connection, I've just been a customer for years.
    I've been a Bailey's customer for years, too. A round file and a chain guide like the Oregon https://www.oregonproducts.com/en/Fi...-32%22/p/37534 have always worked well for me. I bought the Dremel attachment to sharpen chainsaws because I have a Dremel and couldn't resist all of the nifty gadgets and it doe's work great but the guide for it is 30 Degrees only.
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  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by rancher1913 View Post
    can't find if they fit a sthil, guess I will have to check the chain boxs I got and see if I can cross match. I know husky and sthil have different sprockets. tried a husky once and spent more on repairs than the saw was worth, currently have a fleet of sthils so cheep chain if it fits would be good.
    They just added a chain finder at Baileys, top of the page, main window, there are tabs under the window if it doesn't cycle.

    So I got a message from UPS, the chain is arriving tomorrow. And the UPS was under $10.

    The nice thing about having a grinder is you can set the rakers and cover your boots with big fat chips. I'll have a look at that HF grinder next time I'm there. I really spent the money on a Pro Melt and Star Sizer and I can live with that. LOL
    Mal

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  15. #15
    Boolit Master
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    Bailey's Shipping is so fast they don't have a name for it. Chains are here!

    No More Reversing Chain Grinders! OSHA Doesn't Like Them!

    OSHA found out most paper cuts come from the edges of paper so now all the edges Must Be Trimmed Off.
    Mal

    Mal Paso means Bad Pass, just so you know.

  16. #16
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    I set my rakers with a hand file. It's not hard.

    I won't brag on my hand file sharpening skills, as there are many that can do better. It's not hard to beat the factory sharpening, though.

    Chain comes into its own after a couple of sharpenings and it is broken in and finished the initial stretch.
    I give loading advice based on my actual results in factory rifles with standard chambers, twist rates and basic accurizing.
    My goals for using cast boolits are lots of good, cheap, and reasonably accurate shooting, while avoiding overly tedious loading processes.
    The BHN Deformation Formula, and why I don't use it.
    How to find and fix sizing die eccentricity problems.
    Do you trust your casting thermometer?
    A few musings.

  17. #17
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    I've got a small rake file guide. Works great.
    I Am Descended From Men Who Would Not Be Ruled

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  18. #18
    Boolit Grand Master

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    You may need a carbide chain, spendy but sometimes the only answer.

  19. #19
    Boolit Master
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    I just looked as things change but carbide chain is chips of carbide brazed to a standard chain and ground to shape. The cutting edge is about 75 degrees so cutting is very slow. One loop for my saw is $165. vs $16 for standard chain. Diamond is the only thing that will sharpen carbide but most diamond wheels available are for standard chain. I'm sure something world work but you would have to pioneer your own trail.

    I spent $32 on Semi Chisel chain to buck a pile of wood that was sitting next to the road for a year. I flipped the logs first to get rid of most of the dirt and kept up a decent cutting speed. I need stretch the money as far as it will go. This is just cleanup, I switched to propane in the new house. With all the insulation and double pane windows I couldn't justify the space for a wood stove. I'm just trying to make the wood attractive enough that the neighbors will haul it off. Fire got the logsplitter too or I'd sell it. LOL
    Mal

    Mal Paso means Bad Pass, just so you know.

  20. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mal Paso View Post
    SNIP...

    Bailey's has a 10 loop special on USA made Woodland Pro Saw Chain going now and 3/8x84 links was $160 for 10. 20 inch and under are all 10 for $100. For Very Good Chain!
    When Stihl brand chains got expensive about 10 years ago, I found Baileys.
    My close friend and I have a matching set of Stihl saws...one each of 16" and 20".

    After I bought a couple woodland chains to tryout, I started ordering them by the 10 pak when on sale, I bet I've ordered 60 chains from them over the years for my friend and myself. Woodland chains cut and hold an edge every bit as good as Stihl chains, IMHO. But I should mention...not that it matters, but all my Woodland chains came in boxes that say Made in Canada.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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