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Chainsaw
Chain damage... what the hell has he done to cause this???
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<blockquote data-quote="Coralillo Lo Pro" data-source="post: 8215991" data-attributes="member: 140216"><p>Strange effect for hitting metal, then I remember I'm used to the effect on teeth on high revving gas powered saws when milling which has just been uniform dulling because I've hit the metal so gradually at the milling pace of cutting. My tiny 10" battery powered saw I bought years ago kicks back something awful on small branches due to low revs and skip teeth. Even with full comp, I think the teeth get mangled a whole different way hitting metal with low rpm battery saws. Teeth grab a lot more. They just seem a lot more dangerous to use than high revving saws.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Coralillo Lo Pro, post: 8215991, member: 140216"] Strange effect for hitting metal, then I remember I'm used to the effect on teeth on high revving gas powered saws when milling which has just been uniform dulling because I've hit the metal so gradually at the milling pace of cutting. My tiny 10" battery powered saw I bought years ago kicks back something awful on small branches due to low revs and skip teeth. Even with full comp, I think the teeth get mangled a whole different way hitting metal with low rpm battery saws. Teeth grab a lot more. They just seem a lot more dangerous to use than high revving saws. [/QUOTE]
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