wish I had one now to fix my 28 inch bar and 20 inch barWow! Looks like a nice piece of kit! Wish I'd had one of those when I bent my 36" bar!
That looks really handy. Who makes that tool Mark?
I actually called the guy today, he's from Mirimichi New Brunswick Canada, bends a lot of harvester bars, chainsaw bars he charges 20$, laminated can be tricky because the lamination could come apart, steel works better. The machine sells for 4995$ (canadian$)or something like that. For rail width e uses a type of chisle, said you could take a normal chisle and grind it to get the job done. IDNO when you got a 28 inch bar that's worth 200$ you might feel inclined to give it a try. I could spend days trying to bend my bar back and never get it, send it to one of these guys and he's done in twenty minutes, if it breaks it breaks, was already unusable to begin withGreat tool. Looks like it has a twister as well as a straightener which would be mandatory. I would want an adjustable piston stop so as to go only a certain amount through the vertical plane. As good as it looks, I bet it still requires a great deal of operator experience to get a bar really right. Then you've got to get the rail width even and the gauge uniform. Still, looks like a great asset for a large shop.
Or a really strong bench vise mounted to a 600-lb work bench made out of solid oak. That usually works for me. But, sometimes nothing works.I used two trees close together to straighten bars.
I don't know who makes that tool, I saw it at a friend's place in Indiana, could come from Husqvarna.
Mark
It’s probably not much help now but I purchased a manual bar straightener years ago from Baileys. I think it was made in Idaho. It was a cast iron piece with a slot and a jacking screw. It came with adapters for bar tip rivet removal. I still use it.
One time you even got a bar nearly as straight as you were on a Friday night.I used two trees close together to straighten bars.
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