- Joined
- Aug 13, 2014
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- 525
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- 864
Whatever saw you end up with, it's worth learning to file a chain properly. It takes some practice to get decent at, but it will save you some money, you'll see much better cutting performance, and your chains will probably last longer. A few swipes with a file every couple of tanks of gas will turn having to have your chains ground into an infrequent thing, as long as you don't hit anything.Thanks, and no I don't know how to file a chain but I do bring them into the local Ace hardware for sharpening instead of buying a new chain every time. I don't sell firewood or make any money using my saw, so it's run only when I want to go out and harvest some wood or clean up deadfalls. Recently I've started taking down a lot more trees as the ash borer has killed off everything on my place. I imagine that using this little green saw every day on jobs might not last too long since it wasn't intended for that. But I've been impressed with its overall performance.
Also, get GOOD files, and make sure they're the right size for your chain. I saw a guy sharpening 3/8" chain, not low profile, with a 5/32 file, and wondering why his saw wouldn't cut green poplar...