There is .063" total ones. The last one I had was that in 32".I'll pass on the Total bars since they're only .050. I'd like a Tsumura since it comes in 0.063...oils better and runs cooler.
There is .063" total ones. The last one I had was that in 32".I'll pass on the Total bars since they're only .050. I'd like a Tsumura since it comes in 0.063...oils better and runs cooler.
That's good to know. I wish the Total bar came in the light version like the Tsumura. I don't care for the looks of the Tsumura (big white spots??).There is .063" total ones. The last one I had was that in 32".
No way....plastic inserts? So the white spots on the Tsmura and Sugi are plastic inserts?That's the plastic inserts. That's their version of the lightweight. So if total badged one it would be it.
Stihl mills a section out. The inside is hollow except a few ribs. The oregon is the same way with just one big insert.
Yeah I meant one per side. I remember someone running one without insert.Oregon mills out the center, countersunk style around the edges. Then places two pieces of aluminum sandwiched around an aircraft use epoxy, and riveted once at each end. I have had one apart.
Since they are new chains. I used the same method on all to tension. When you have (had) 50 bars and are changing them all the time. You get pretty good at taking them on and off and yes tensioning the chains.
"Substances with very low emissivity ratings, like highly-polished metals, tend to be very reflective of ambient infrared energy and less effective at emitting their own electromagnetic waves. If you were to point an infrared thermometer with fixed emissivity at the side of a stainless steel pot filled with boiling water, for example, you might get a reading closer to 100°F (38°C) than 212°F (100°C). That’s because the shiny metal is better at reflecting the ambient radiation of the room than it is at emitting its own infrared radiation."
Source: http://www.thermoworks.com/blog/2012/03/infrared-thermometry/
Without a hard contact thermocouple to compare readings it leaves your numbers with some question of accuracy for me.
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