How about down angle for round filed chains? Some chains ask for it, some don't. It's a couple extra steps when grinding, and annoying to keep track of which chains want it and which don't. Does it really matter?
I was told, by people that I trust, that it makes a significant difference under test conditions. I believe them. But I don't really notice it in the cutting that I do, so I skip the extra steps involved.How about down angle for round filed chains? Some chains ask for it, some don't. It's a couple extra steps when grinding, and annoying to keep track of which chains want it and which don't. Does it really matter?
I don't know if this is helpful, but I just try and go parallel to the witness mark on the top of the chain. I would rather touch up in the woods than replace the chain. I file by hand like Cliff and really prefer this method. If the chain is really bad, I will use the dremel rotary tool. If you get to wrapped up in sharpening angles, you'll wind up messing with the saw more than cutting wood.
I was obsessed with the manufacturers' recommended angles, until I understood, that these were just “starting recommendations“.Has anybody here ever really tried looking up every chain and grinding to varying manufacturers' specs versus just picking angles and sticking to them?
That would depend on how the wood is and how powerful your saw is. The more aggressive angles you use the more power required that simple.Now that I have your attention, but before the war starts, let me clarify. Round file only. If a chain ships sharpened at a 35 deg angle, but I decided to waste some time and reshape it to 30deg for some reason, will it cut just as well as a chain that was 30deg from the factory? I'm not asking if 30 is better than 35, I'm just wondering if chains have any intrinsic angle that each cutter design works best at, or if the angle is totally independent
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