James Miller
Addicted to ArboristSite



Joke. Figure of speach. I suck at filing so I might as well be filing them backwards.Chain on backwards? I'm confused by backwards filed chain.
Yup I reckon that explains me to a t. Lol.Thank you for explaining. Sounds kinda hillbilly genius.![]()
Thing that maid the biggest difference for me and it might sound dumb is stop over thinking it. When I really try to file the best chain I can it generally cuts like ****. If I just file and go I get better results.Joke. Figure of speach. I suck at filing so I might as well be filing them backwards.
Fixed itWinter wonderland. But dont worry, in just a few short weeks, the grass will be green again and your wife can takes pics of you mowing and starting the mower on fire.
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I've wondered about the steel used in bars now a days. I had a couple 36" Homelite bars that were bellied like that, a little farther back from the tip. But, it took 20 years of commercial service to do it. We used to use the 1050's on big lot jobs where we had a groundie walking around with gas and oil. Both tanks are on the top of the saw, he'd refill fuel and oil with out turning the saw off, just idle back and stretch your fingers till he was done, then back at it, Joe.
As a kid I don't remember flipping the bars. I said something to my cousin not long ago, his father was in the tree business too, and he said that way back the bars couldn't be flipped. The only ones I remember that couldn't be flipped were the Banana nosed, anti kick back bars. I've got a couple saws left from the 50's and those bars will flip. I remember Dad dressing bars and keeping them square, just don't remember flipping them, Joe.I bought a used JohnieRed 625 from a logger in Canada. Had a really bad belly just behind the sprocket. He must have never turned the bar over. I ran that saw as my #2 for many a year with the same bar. Didn't seem to make much difference whether the good or bad side was down.
Here's one of those "banana nosed" ones.As a kid I don't remember flipping the bars. I said something to my cousin not long ago, his father was in the tree business too, and he said that way back the bars couldn't be flipped. The only ones I remember that couldn't be flipped were the Banana nosed, anti kick back bars. I've got a couple saws left from the 50's and those bars will flip. I remember Dad dressing bars and keeping them square, just don't remember flipping them, Joe.
So now I need one of those. Little brother to my 2.3.Here's one of those "banana nosed" ones.
It's made of some great looking metal, I'll probably never need to flip it lol.
I should run it though as it's been a while, that and clean it up, kinda dirty right now.
View attachment 630741
For sure.So now I need one of those. Little brother to my 2.3.View attachment 630749
Went to the scrounge pile today. Took the 445, 550 as a backup and the 395 just in case I got greedy.Thing that maid the biggest difference for me and it might sound dumb is stop over thinking it. When I really try to file the best chain I can it generally cuts like ****. If I just file and go I get better results.
You can do a good job freehand. It wasn’t until I got a grinder and was disappointed with the results that I got better at filing. Watch videos, read threads. You’ll get the hang of it.Went to the scrounge pile today. Took the 445, 550 as a backup and the 395 just in case I got greedy.The 550/395 never made it out of the truck and never refeuled the 445. It cut everything I planned on getting today on one tank. It had the BFC on it and it cut fine for 1/2 tank. Then started doing the same wierd stuff it does on the 550. Throwing dust/small chips and the top of the chain would lift off the bar in the cut. In the middle of the cut it wouldnt pull. Instead it would push the saw out like the bar was pinched but it wasnt. I need a better file guide and a bunch more chain.