Echo-man
ArboristSite Lurker
I have the HF one. If nothing else, its a good rest to use with a file. If you use a light touch like mentioned previously, it will do an OK job.
Has anyone used the chicago electric chain sharpener that horbor freight is selling for 30bucks? I am looking for all feedback on it good and bad. I just bought 27 chains that need sharpening....
........i blew out over 20 chains yesterday in no time.
i'd look for a Maxx grinder ,Jolly,or Oregon.
if you have the money,Stihl or Silvey.look on Ebay.there are always used quality grinders for resonable on there.
i sharpen a lot of chains and my dealer cannot sharpen a chain to save their life at $7 a chain.i bought the stihl grinder from him and it paid for itself in 3 months easily.10 chains at a pop at $7 adds up quick around here with all the maples full of metal and rocks.i blew out over 20 chains yesterday in no time.
20 chains in one day, are you kidding? I thought I was bad going dulling up 2-3 chains a day if I was cuttin' maple that I dragged through the mud with the tractor for 1000 ft.
+1 I got the best jolly I could four years ago and its like new
never have regretted it accept forking out 300. to buy it!
I will sharpen ten chains and the second one starts getting
dull swap out I have a ben on my bucket for the dull ones!
I don't know if any of you had this happen but, I bought a northern grinder, got it home and mounted it and put the wheel on in the late afternoon so that was it for the day. the next morning I got out to the shop and was going to start sharpening and I noticed overnite the wheel on the grinder cracked up like a spiderweb and when i grabbed it with my fingers it crumbled like it was dried out piece of bread, I brought it back and they replaced it, but I hate to think what would have happened if I didn't see it. So please check your grinder wheel before you start.
Have a great day all,,,tuke
i told the guy it would be extra if i trashed the chains on the stalk and stump.i could see about 20 old clothes line pulleys in it before i ever started on it.there was at least 6' of T bar in the stump as well. it was behind a 3 story apartment building in the north end of Hartford.he paid the extra and i salvaged all but two chains so far.they need a couple teeth replaced,matched up on the grinder and i'm golden.
there is usually all kinds of metal around here in maples.i hit a peice of granite 6 feet up on a hickory last year that was next to an old stone wall.it must have picked it up years ago but i found it right away.
i also should admit,i sharpen chains for a couple of buddies i work with also so they weren't all my chains.
HF has one on display here, it is all metal, maybe a little light duty but might work ok. It will only do blades up to 15". I have an 18" buzz saw blade that costs me $20 for every sharpening. I'd sure like to find a cheaper alternative. There was a retired guy who did it for $10 but he died last year.The consensus seems to be that the HF chain sharpener works, but not well enough to bother with. I was in one of their stores yesterday and noticed that they also have a circular saw sharpener for $70. They didn't have one on display and I didn't have time to open a box and unpack one, but I wonder if it's also a flexible plastic piece of junk. Anybody have any experience with it?
That makes much more sense to me now as you are obviously working in extremely difficult conditions. Essentially you are cuttin' a mixture or wood and scrap metal. I don't envy you having to work in those conditions. Best of luck with your cuttin'-and, if you aren't already using PPE, IMHO eye protection at a minimum would be well advised.