I was milling today and roughly timed out how long it took me to mill a seven foot length of spruce 21 inches wide.
It took around 20 minutes and seemed very slow.
It was the second cut after cutting 14 feet of the same log. I had sharpened the chain prior to beginning the day using a file and a grandberg guide and set the raker depth at .030.
It is a Laser brand grandberg stye ripping chain where there are two kinds of teeth wide ones and skinny ones. I have never been able to get the actual specs to sharpen it from laser so went with 0 degrees for the wide teeth and 30 degrees for the skinny teeth. The chain may have been set at 35 on the skinny teeth at manufacture. It is my understanding that raker depth is set at different levels for different teeth on this kind of chain and I ignored this and set them for all for .030
I am still figuring out/experimenting with how to sharpen this chain and what settings work.
Apart from any sharpening issues, the saw seems to cut much faster when not in the chainsaw mill. I am wondering if something is off alignment wise with the mill. There was more vibration that usual today and the surface was less even than previous.
I have never timed it before but it has seemed to be slower lately, but I don't have background with similar logs to compare with.
I am milling with a Jonsered 2095 and it power doesn't seem to be an issue.
Does anyone have the sharpening specs for grandberg ripping chain?
What is a reasonable amount of time per foot of log?
Thoughts? Advice?
It took around 20 minutes and seemed very slow.
It was the second cut after cutting 14 feet of the same log. I had sharpened the chain prior to beginning the day using a file and a grandberg guide and set the raker depth at .030.
It is a Laser brand grandberg stye ripping chain where there are two kinds of teeth wide ones and skinny ones. I have never been able to get the actual specs to sharpen it from laser so went with 0 degrees for the wide teeth and 30 degrees for the skinny teeth. The chain may have been set at 35 on the skinny teeth at manufacture. It is my understanding that raker depth is set at different levels for different teeth on this kind of chain and I ignored this and set them for all for .030
I am still figuring out/experimenting with how to sharpen this chain and what settings work.
Apart from any sharpening issues, the saw seems to cut much faster when not in the chainsaw mill. I am wondering if something is off alignment wise with the mill. There was more vibration that usual today and the surface was less even than previous.
I have never timed it before but it has seemed to be slower lately, but I don't have background with similar logs to compare with.
I am milling with a Jonsered 2095 and it power doesn't seem to be an issue.
Does anyone have the sharpening specs for grandberg ripping chain?
What is a reasonable amount of time per foot of log?
Thoughts? Advice?