Hello all, Its my 1st post here, my apologies if it would be created in another category.
I have designed an Firewood processor and I am missing a few details. I am stuck on the chainsaw size and on the availability of chainsaw bars.
Because my gas motor is not so strong I would like to stick with a 3/8" chain, but I cannot find a 3/8" bar wide enough to accept a sprocket with 3.35"-3.5" diameter (15Teeth). The sprocket is mounted on the hydraulic motor and will rotate at around 4700rpms at 1800psi.
All the harvester bars I found online are 0.404. Do you think I should go to that pitch, or is there any other way that I haven;t thought?
The regular stock bars are to narrow and the chain will not sit in the channel with such a big sprocket.
If the .404 chain is the way to go, do you know how much more power they demand compared to a 3/8"?
The hydraulic motor will develop 4700rpms at 166in-lb torque so a 3/8" chain with a 15T sprocket will move at 4400ft/min linear speed, while with a 0.404 the chain will rotate at 4800ft/min
Are that speeds adequate? Should I put a 14T sprocket with a 0.404 to maintain 4500ft/min and have more torque?
Sorry too many quastions but I do not have experience with that particular matter and I do not know what works best. I understand that the 0.404 is a safer chain. I just do not know if I have enough hp.
Thank you in advance!!!!
I have designed an Firewood processor and I am missing a few details. I am stuck on the chainsaw size and on the availability of chainsaw bars.
Because my gas motor is not so strong I would like to stick with a 3/8" chain, but I cannot find a 3/8" bar wide enough to accept a sprocket with 3.35"-3.5" diameter (15Teeth). The sprocket is mounted on the hydraulic motor and will rotate at around 4700rpms at 1800psi.
All the harvester bars I found online are 0.404. Do you think I should go to that pitch, or is there any other way that I haven;t thought?
The regular stock bars are to narrow and the chain will not sit in the channel with such a big sprocket.
If the .404 chain is the way to go, do you know how much more power they demand compared to a 3/8"?
The hydraulic motor will develop 4700rpms at 166in-lb torque so a 3/8" chain with a 15T sprocket will move at 4400ft/min linear speed, while with a 0.404 the chain will rotate at 4800ft/min
Are that speeds adequate? Should I put a 14T sprocket with a 0.404 to maintain 4500ft/min and have more torque?
Sorry too many quastions but I do not have experience with that particular matter and I do not know what works best. I understand that the 0.404 is a safer chain. I just do not know if I have enough hp.
Thank you in advance!!!!