Short answer: 'No'.
If you look at the thickness of the average chip, it barely gets down there. But if you are in a high 'chip flow' situation, it might slow things down a little.
That said, I like to leave the bottom of the gullet flat, knowing that this may be more cosmetic than practical. This is really a separate step from 'sharpening' a cutter. I sometimes do this with a larger diameter file, after sharpening the edges with the recommended file. With the grinder, I back off the tooth positioning dog a half turn or more, lower the grinding wheel head a bit, then 'run the gullets' on each side. On chains where this has never been done, it may take a few passes. Then I set the depth gauges.
I think that some guys get into trouble focusing on how the cutter looks, rather than understanding the business part. Get that top edge, corner, and upper part of the side edge sharp; then go back and make things pretty as a separate step. If you try to do this in one pass (file or grinder) you will not end up with the edges you want.
JMHO
Philbert
Thanks, Philbert!
I'm completely with you on this one! One needs only to look at a chain which cutters are nearing the end of their useful life. Their size is probably 1/3 of the new size, yet many experienced users know that the smaller profile cuts more quickly!
Anyway, thanks for your input. It's cleared up much confusion for me. I also like the "two separate steps" approach. "Sharpening" (or grinding) is a separate process from "cleaning out" the rest of the cutter.
Great learning experience here on AS! Thanks again.
Mike