I have a chinse mill and ran a MS460 on it for a few years. I used a ladder for a rail. Everything worked great.
Then I put a MS 660 on it this winter and all hell seems to have broken loose.
I generally cut spruce and cut slabs the full lenght of the ladder. Guessing 10 or 12 feet.
The bar/chain was dipping a LOT when I cut to the point you couldn't finish the cut because the slab between the bar and mill got too big as you cut. This was last spring..
I attributed it to the weight of the MS660 pulling the ladder into the log as I cut. I solved this by using 2 bolts through a hole I drilled in the rungs. I got a bolt 1/3 up and 2/3 up the ladder. When I place the ladder on the log, I screw the bolts down so they are just touching. Problem looked like it was solved as I milled a bunch of planks a few weeks ago.
Today I went out with the same set up and I couldn't cut more then 12 inches into the log before it was binding too much to move the mill forward.
I took it all a part this afternoon and it looks like my bar is bent a bit. It's a 28 inch bar so not very big. I cant tell you if its bent up or down since I took it off the mill without paying attention. Guessing the bend is about 1/4 to 3/8 inch. I suspect that the bar is also twisted, but I can't measure that easily
I did sharpen the chain before heading out today, but the angles of the teeth seem even. I didn't touch the rakers. It's a ripping chain.
I will get a new bar tomorrow, but could there be other causes?
I laid the laddy on the garage floor and its fairly flat. A very very very slight twist in it. Only noticebale when I tap my foot on the corners.
I tried the measure the mill to see if it perhaps was bent, but I couldn't figure out an easy way to measure if it's bent and causing the dip and I had to quit for the day since my kids came home.
Any sueggestions would be great.
Then I put a MS 660 on it this winter and all hell seems to have broken loose.
I generally cut spruce and cut slabs the full lenght of the ladder. Guessing 10 or 12 feet.
The bar/chain was dipping a LOT when I cut to the point you couldn't finish the cut because the slab between the bar and mill got too big as you cut. This was last spring..
I attributed it to the weight of the MS660 pulling the ladder into the log as I cut. I solved this by using 2 bolts through a hole I drilled in the rungs. I got a bolt 1/3 up and 2/3 up the ladder. When I place the ladder on the log, I screw the bolts down so they are just touching. Problem looked like it was solved as I milled a bunch of planks a few weeks ago.
Today I went out with the same set up and I couldn't cut more then 12 inches into the log before it was binding too much to move the mill forward.
I took it all a part this afternoon and it looks like my bar is bent a bit. It's a 28 inch bar so not very big. I cant tell you if its bent up or down since I took it off the mill without paying attention. Guessing the bend is about 1/4 to 3/8 inch. I suspect that the bar is also twisted, but I can't measure that easily
I did sharpen the chain before heading out today, but the angles of the teeth seem even. I didn't touch the rakers. It's a ripping chain.
I will get a new bar tomorrow, but could there be other causes?
I laid the laddy on the garage floor and its fairly flat. A very very very slight twist in it. Only noticebale when I tap my foot on the corners.
I tried the measure the mill to see if it perhaps was bent, but I couldn't figure out an easy way to measure if it's bent and causing the dip and I had to quit for the day since my kids came home.
Any sueggestions would be great.