tomtrees58
Addicted to ArboristSite
i posted this months ago and some one last year it works ok used it 1 time its on the bench if your good just a file works best
Yeah, you guys o get slugged over there, you reckon that they would look at joining the currency. The high AUD as made things cheaper, but this gear is well over ouble what it s in he US! I checked the site, if I'm running a standard Stihl bar 25 and chain, (3/8) what size do I need to get 7/32, 3/16! 5/32 or 13/64? Can anyone help!
My next alternative is the Granberg sharpening jig but it looks complicated and requires constant adjustment with different chains. But you can sharpen ripping chains though. The Timberline looks like its ideal for what I want at the moment for my cross cutting.
Glad to here it can do what was advertised. My biggest issue with hand filing is consistency some days I am a machine the next all thumbs. I received a e-mail from Timberline they are working on a jig that will have a 10 degree angle for milling chains. Now a adjustable raker gauge?
Good idea Rakaucutter, I took the plunge and ordered one today. I ordered two cutters to get me going. Let us know how you go with the hand file in between, might save on the carbide cutters. Hey mate, if you want to sharpen a different (smaller chain) do you just order the right size cutter to suit? Anyway, thanks for the posts :msp_thumbup:[/QUOTE]Brilliant....that is good news if they can work that one out.. A lot of folk will be interested in that!
Used the Timberline sharpened chain today on some Jarrah posts (not NZ native I hasten to add!). This wood is like iron normally but the 'better than new' chain ate it up like the proverbial knife/butter.
Figure I'll tickle up the edge with the hand file and use the Timberline instead of getting the grinder to it or getting the local Stihl guy to sharpen them after my filing has made a mess of them.
BobL-
Thanks for the feedback. I'm working out a new way to set depth gauges using my 511a. i use the small 1/4" wide wheel the axis set a 60deg the wheel dressed to point an angle at the intersection of the cutter and the top of the link. the idea being that if the tooth rotates a bit, the depth stays constant. the height is set pretty much to .25.
Don't be embarrassed - it is what it is. I got mine cheap so I still use it. The bumps will become significant when you use progressive raker depth setting.i was also embarrassed by the lousy low-kickback chain, don't remember how i came by that, but the saw had a much used chain that needed sharpening so it's the one i pulled off the shelf to make the photos. the "bumps" are much lower than the depth gauges and not a factor.
This you need to learn CSM - ChainSaw Milldon't know what a "CSM" is.
Then if you apply the progressive raker depth setting you will be even more impressed.regarding the hook and resulting feed, the chips speak volumes. i assure you that it cut aggressively without having to lever the dogs.
See above and check this thread http://www.arboristsite.com/milling-saw-mills/237919.htmyour choice of angles interests me. how do you measure the top angle of the depth gauge?
I have 3 DAFs for my various woodworking activities.Bob I know you are in Australia, but what is the brand of digital angle finder that you are using when you are filing your rakers?
0.025" is only appropriate for a brand new chain. For a cutter to continue to cut efficiently as it wears, the raker depth should progressively increase. A new cutter has a raker height of 0.025 and the gullet is nominally 0.25" When the gullet is half an inch wide the raker depth should be around 0.05" otherwise it will simply not grab enough wood and progressively make more and more dust. The ratio of gullet width to raker height should be around 10 and this will generate a raker-wood-cutter angle of ~5.7º. Carlton File-O-Plates (FOPs) generate an angle of around 4.5º which is IMHO too shallow. This raker angle is by no means a fixed quantity and will vary with type of wood, power of saw and length of bar/Chain. In 30" Aussie hardwood with a 880 around 6º works for me other people milling smaller softer wood use 7 or 7.5º. This method of setting the rakers (progressive raker depth setting) becomes more and more important (much more than cutter shape and smoothness) as the chain wears. Everyone I knows who tried this ended up being able to optimise their cutting (especially with older chains) in ways they have not been able to do before.
This you need to learn CSM - ChainSaw Mill
See above and check this thread http://www.arboristsite.com/milling-saw-mills/237919.htm
The first post on this thread pondered whether the Timberline rig could be jimmied to set the carbide burr at ripping-chain angles (versus x-cutting 25-30 degrees); I'm about to order one with extra burrs and wonder if a tweak has been devised?
i'm using the husqvarna filing guide which is similar in concept to the file-o-plate and, i believe progressively increases the raker setting and the top wears. it also lets you choose between a high and low setting, based on the wood being cut. i use it two set to teeth and then set up the 511a grinder to duplicate my filing.
Looking at it I cannot honestly see why they could make an additional guide for 10deg just. Like they offer the 35deg etc. I ordered one on tree stuff and check to see if there was a 10deg die but nothing available. An older post on here raised the same issue however hasn't seemed to be addressed. There is a bit of discussion regarding the Carlton chains though nothing on ripping chins. If they could it would be fantastic or CSMs, then it would be a matter of setting the rackers.
Yep the Husky guide is a semi-progressive one like the FOP is a semi progressive one. I haven't measured the Husky guide but have used one and I found the lowest raker setting was still too high for older cutters.
This thread discusses raker settings in some detail and from this it is clear that two raker settings are just not enough for milling to cover the range of wood hardness, B&C length, and CS power. The OP in that thread is using a 24" bar on a 3120 in softwoods and the fact that he cannot bog the saw suggests he can use an even higher raker angle than he is currently using.
To optimise cutting speed a raker guide would need to be able to set the raker angles from about 5º to say 10º in 0.5º, or at least 1º, increments. I can understand why a company would not risk selling such a product as a newbie setting the rakers to 10º risks serious of kickback especially on older cutters.
You are talking about 4, different parts of the chain, and they each have to be addressed respectively.
The diameter of the file, carbide cutter, grinding wheel edge, etc. shapes the cutter and sharpens the top and side edges.
Clearing out the gullet only needs to be done if it is an issue: if you are having trouble clearing chips, or if that portion of the side plate is sticking out out more than the upper part of the side plate (where the cutting is done).
Then you do the depth gauges (as you described ).
Then I would look at the bumper tie straps and make sure that they are not higher than the depth gauges.
Philbert
I'm suffering some confusion about depth gauges. i sharpened a semi-chisel chain with the timberline sharpener. it is a 3/8" and i used a 7/32" cutter. i set the depth gauges using a stihl universal chain and bar tool.
. . . . the stihl tool showed the rakers to be just a little high so out of curiosity i measured using a vernier callipers from top of tooth to bar and top of raker to bar. it measured a -.8mm and i was able to repeat that on all cutters that i measured. to clarify, my stihl tool showed my depth gauges to be too high by a few tenths of a mm and my callipers showed them to be low by .2mm.
Yep the Husky guide is a semi-progressive one like the FOP is a semi progressive one. I haven't measured the Husky guide but have used one and I found the lowest raker setting was still too high for older cutters.
This thread discusses raker settings in some detail and from this it is clear that two raker settings are just not enough for milling to cover the range of wood hardness, B&C length, and CS power. The OP in that thread is using a 24" bar on a 3120 in softwoods and the fact that he cannot bog the saw suggests he can use an even higher raker angle than he is currently using.
To optimise cutting speed a raker guide would need to be able to set the raker angles from about 5º to say 10º in 0.5º, or at least 1º, increments. I can understand why a company would not risk selling such a product as a newbie setting the rakers to 10º risks serious of kickback especially on older cutters.
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