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Chainsaw
Lowering the chain Depth Gauge
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<blockquote data-quote="northmanlogging" data-source="post: 8092782" data-attributes="member: 76731"><p>it has to do with thickness and shape more then anything, to get a good smooth cut on a raker you would need a very fine toothed file, also doesn't help that the tooth isn't held very rigidly so it is free to flop around, on the cutting edge your are cutting at an angle, as well as cutting the top plate, so the file has something to "balance" on.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="northmanlogging, post: 8092782, member: 76731"] it has to do with thickness and shape more then anything, to get a good smooth cut on a raker you would need a very fine toothed file, also doesn't help that the tooth isn't held very rigidly so it is free to flop around, on the cutting edge your are cutting at an angle, as well as cutting the top plate, so the file has something to "balance" on. [/QUOTE]
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