middleagemutant
ArboristSite Operative
Contact F150 on hear he's in Ohio he fixed my saw the johnsered 2253 that was at 3 other shops he carrys johnsered, echo and Makita and he knows his stuff call him he won't steer you wrong
A 372 doesn't have the torque to pull the same chain as a 85+ cc Husky. If you run the best chain for each saw the bigger saw will cut faster. SteveI was meaning all things being equal, the 372 will be faster in smaller wood. Pretty obvious if you put a better chain on one saw it will have an advantage, but then thats not a very good comparison is it?
You are completely missing the point of what i was trying to say (twice now). Put the SAME chain on a 372 and a 390, the 372 will be faster up to a certain point in smaller wood.A 372 doesn't have the torque to pull the same chain as a 85+ cc Husky. If you run the best chain for each saw the bigger saw will cut faster. Steve
Wouldn't there be a range of bar in wood where the 390 could pull one more tooth on the drive sprocket and be faster with the same chain?You are completely missing the point of what i was trying to say (twice now). Put the SAME chain on a 372 and a 390, the 372 will be faster up to a certain point in smaller wood.
Again, of course you can set one saw up to be faster than the other. I dont see why this is so difficult: same bar, same chain, same sprocket, 372 will be faster up to a certain point, probably somewhere in the 16-20” wood. SO if the op cuts a lot of 16-20” wood and rarely cuts 30” wood, then the 372 would be a more sensible choice.Wouldn't there be a range of bar in wood where the 390 could pull one more tooth on the drive sprocket and be faster with the same chain?
I think since the title of the thread is which is better, 390 or 395 perhaps the answer is 395 because one can run lower depth gauges. This seems to fit in with the logic of the original poster here as expressed in prior posts. It has bigger main bearings does it not.
Seems the OP is curious about pho vs with bar for a 395 in his last posts I noticed.
I could be wrong, but im quite sure they both take 6203’s on both sides. Problems with 390 i think were associated w the big end bearing.It has bigger main bearings does it not.
Again, of course you can set one saw up to be faster than the other. I dont see why this is so difficult: same bar, same chain, same sprocket, 372 will be faster up to a certain point, probably somewhere in the 16-20” wood. SO if the op cuts a lot of 16-20” wood and rarely cuts 30” wood, then the 372 would be a more sensible choice.
You are completely missing the point of what i was trying to say (twice now). Put the SAME chain on a 372 and a 390, the 372 will be faster up to a certain point in smaller wood.
You sure about that? I use to think the same.
You sure about that? I use to think the same.
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