For the amount of work it takes to pull a cord out of the woods, I know $600 isnt that much. We're allegedly $220USD ($280CAD) for a cord in the interior of BC where wood is plenty. I say allegedly because I havent ever picked up the phone and made an order or boughten a cord. That price figure is as of 5 minutes ago punching "firewood" into kijiji in my area. You sure as heck wont find me out there in the woods felling and bucking cords to sell em for $280. Maybe theres more to it that I'm missing (quality of wood and etc.) But I'm not that experienced at the whole deal. I just figured the $600 USD range is getting closer to the it'd be worth doing to sell at that price point.
Threads getting a bit off topic but thats alright. I'm interested in the info of demographics.
As for something related to the sharpening of chains... I'm just using the flat style depth gauge with the slot in the center to make my .025 depth. I understand that it is basing it off of 2 or 3 cutters height to make the slot index on the raker it's filing. If the 3 cutters are at different lenghts it makes the tool able to rock either up or down, depending on if it's pushed down on the forward tooth or down on the rearward tooth. That would then make the specific tooth youre setting the depth for either a smidge deeper than .025 or a smidge shallower. And so on and so forth and you end up with rakers that are inconsistent to the actual cutter it's gauging.
Does that variance on either side of the .025 tool matter when dealing with cutters of various lengths?
I guess to make each raker .025" to the exact cutter would involve some sort of different jig to make it efficient to zero in on 1 cutter:raker at a time without completely wasting time...
Whats the authourity on that?