woodswalker
ArboristSite Member
Howdy,
I have really been enjoying this site! a lot of great information and experience here! I've been running saws my whole life, but am very much the newbie at working on them! Like many here, I think there's something about working on my own saws that just does it for me!
My question is about dressing bar rails. I tend to flip my bars often, and am pretty anal about running sharp chains, so I dont really have a problem with the bar rails wearing unevenly. I have seen this, where one side is a 32nd of an inch higher than the other, and people wonder why their saws wont cut straight! My bars are wearing evenly, but it's the drive channel I'm having problems with..... I think they are wearing over time, eventually making the bar sloppy, the bar just doesnt cut right, chain starts going crooked, bar binds, bad words said...
I bought a bar rail closer from baileys, with the two bearings, and have tried it a couple of times, and pretty much want to throw it accross the shop every time. Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but I can't get it to do squat. Bar in a vise, I put it on with the bar between the bearings, tighten it down to a little resistance, roll it back and forth along the rails. Gradually I tighten it up to hopefully begin closing the rails... never seems to do didly, and jumps off half the time.. Am I doing something wrong, or is the thing just a piece of crap?
I actually bought that little file holder by pferd from baileys too. the one to dress the bar rails, put it on one bar and dulled the file it came with beyond use on the first bar I tried to dress??? What gives? bad file? bar rails I was trying to grind wound up grinding the file ! Ha Ha! Now I just eyeball it with a big ole coarse benchstone...
Asked my local stihl shop about bar dressing, which they do, and said they just grind the rails, dont close rails.
Saw a link in another thread about a bar shop you can send bars too, hate to box up bars and send them all the way accross the country if there's a better way to do it myself..
Read something on here with the search function about somebody who laid the bar flat on their workbench, put a 2x4 over the bar and beat it with a heavy hammer? I guess that would work, but with my luck, I would mash them shut, and not be able to get the drive links in the channel... Is there a trick to this?
Any body else have this problem or is it just me? any guidance you can lend? Thanks in advance!
I have really been enjoying this site! a lot of great information and experience here! I've been running saws my whole life, but am very much the newbie at working on them! Like many here, I think there's something about working on my own saws that just does it for me!
My question is about dressing bar rails. I tend to flip my bars often, and am pretty anal about running sharp chains, so I dont really have a problem with the bar rails wearing unevenly. I have seen this, where one side is a 32nd of an inch higher than the other, and people wonder why their saws wont cut straight! My bars are wearing evenly, but it's the drive channel I'm having problems with..... I think they are wearing over time, eventually making the bar sloppy, the bar just doesnt cut right, chain starts going crooked, bar binds, bad words said...
I bought a bar rail closer from baileys, with the two bearings, and have tried it a couple of times, and pretty much want to throw it accross the shop every time. Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but I can't get it to do squat. Bar in a vise, I put it on with the bar between the bearings, tighten it down to a little resistance, roll it back and forth along the rails. Gradually I tighten it up to hopefully begin closing the rails... never seems to do didly, and jumps off half the time.. Am I doing something wrong, or is the thing just a piece of crap?
I actually bought that little file holder by pferd from baileys too. the one to dress the bar rails, put it on one bar and dulled the file it came with beyond use on the first bar I tried to dress??? What gives? bad file? bar rails I was trying to grind wound up grinding the file ! Ha Ha! Now I just eyeball it with a big ole coarse benchstone...
Asked my local stihl shop about bar dressing, which they do, and said they just grind the rails, dont close rails.
Saw a link in another thread about a bar shop you can send bars too, hate to box up bars and send them all the way accross the country if there's a better way to do it myself..
Read something on here with the search function about somebody who laid the bar flat on their workbench, put a 2x4 over the bar and beat it with a heavy hammer? I guess that would work, but with my luck, I would mash them shut, and not be able to get the drive links in the channel... Is there a trick to this?
Any body else have this problem or is it just me? any guidance you can lend? Thanks in advance!