Beetlejuice
Addicted to ArboristSite
Little AL, I believe everything you've said to be true. And I do notice a difference in chain performance. Not so much on the bar. I take care of my bar, but abuse the hell out of the chain. What I'm trying" unsuccessfully " to get across is $30 for bar oil. An earlier post ran cheap quarts of motor oil. This I did after giving up the $15 bar oil. That knocked it down to $11-$14.. My local maker sells loops for my 24 inch bar at just about $30.. Discounted if I'm nice.. Have yet to get the discount price.. Go figure.. It's a trade-off to me. Free oil, new chain.,,$10-$15 gal., oil-new chain after what? Say, 10 gallons? I all depends.. I really like to see if I can saw through iron for some reason. Basketball hoops, horse shoes, railroad spikes, fencing, and the like...my next experiment is seeing if I can barrel through a metal detector. So, what works for me is totally taboo for other people.. Other people being the PROs. I am not a pro by a long shot, and will not become a pro.. I hope to just keep getting better and leave nothing behind when I go, as in, fingers, toes, arms and legs. Only legacy I will.leave I hope is a bad memory and rotten taste in everybody's mouth.The holy grail of B&C oil is the % of "Tackifier " the purpose to make it stick like the proverbial S**te to the blanket the more it clings the better job it does Our tame oil supply guys supply extra "Tacifier for us to mix as required dependent on the job requirement we've found with the mechanical handling machine the use of extra goo up to around an extra 3% the lower wear rate on bar & chain is quite marked