Is this bar still good?

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marc2000gt

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Appling, GA
My son got the bar hot on one of my saws. The chain runs on it ok, but I have never had one with all the rivets showing like that. Also you can see it is blue where it got hot. Is the bar usable or does it need replaced? IMG_4420.jpegIMG_4421.jpeg
 
First thing I'd do is check and make sure the chain isn't too tight. You should be able to pull the chain away from the bar and see the drivers. It should turn freely / easily with the saw off.

I've never personally had a bar get that hot, even when it wasn't getting enough oil.
 
Thank you. I figured it was ok, the sprocket still turns smoothly. I just wanted a second opinion.
The bar needs to be dressed with the proper right angle file jig. You also need to check the width of the bar groove with feeler gauges to see how much it has been widened.
 
Lots of miles on that bar and not a helluva lot of rock left on it either. Rock is what presents the cutters to the wood at the angle to allow them to cut efficiently. A flat bar (little to no rock) causes even a sharp loop to cut poorly. Easily fixable on a flat plate abrasive grinder however, so long as the drive tangs don't hit the bottom of the channel.
 
What is "rock" in terms of a bar? Not a term I have heard before.
If a bar is FLAT on the top or bottom, the flat surface won't present the cutter properly and as a bar wears, it looses it's rock and rock is the term that describes the radius of the bar from one end to the other. The older any bar gets, the flatter it becomes and why it's prudent to flip the bar over every time you put on a new loop. Hold up a new bar and look at it and you'll see the rock in it.
 
If a bar is FLAT on the top or bottom, the flat surface won't present the cutter properly and as a bar wears, it looses it's rock and rock is the term that describes the radius of the bar from one end to the other. The older any bar gets, the flatter it becomes and why it's prudent to flip the bar over every time you put on a new loop. Hold up a new bar and look at it and you'll see the rock in it.
Thanks, that makes sense. I suppose dressing the bar to remove burrs in the center would also flatten things over time.
 
yes, it will. I only use my saws infrequently so it's not an issue with me, though I have 'dressed' the bar on my ancient 028 as it gets used a lot. I do it on the 12" PSA disc grinder in the shop, by eyeball of course. I find myself using the 028 more than my other saws. It's only old enough to vote and then some. Bought it new when I was in my early 20's and I'm 73 now. Bought the 075 and the 090 at the same time and neither of those get used today. Just shelf queens now.

Bought all 3 when I owned and operated a tree removal and trimming business in Ohio, many years ago. Owned a couple bucket trucks and a couple chippers and a stump grinder as well. A messy divorce took care of that business. Even owned a terrible Poulan with a wide bar just for bucking big trunks. That saw was a POS.

I live and farm in Michigan now.

Why Michigan? My attorney told me to move here because Ohio and Michigan has no reciprocity with each other when it comes to messy divorces and alimony. So I left. Glad I did too.

Now, I'm a 'pillar' in the community and I never discuss the past.
 
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