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From what you are describing your use as I'd say a 50cc would do everything you want. I used a Husky 41 for years and it did fine but it was a little small for a few things. My Jonsered CS2152 however, makes a great all around saw with an 18 inch bar. Light enough to use all day but with enough power for firewood.
 
Great pictures.
Is there any chance that you have a narrow-width chain in bar with a standard groove width?
Does the chain fit/slide firmly in/on the bar?, or can you wobble/rock the chain from side to side in the bar groove?
I am not familiar with Oregon products, but Stihl has several chain widths and bar groove widths...
The bar and chain came together. That said, it does seem like the chain wants to flop to the side a little. I turned the bar over, and this side seems a little better, so i do wonder if the bar groove was getting a little blown out. I looked at it and I can't see any obvious wear marks, so maybe it's just my imagination.

GO
 
I agree. It looks to me like your grinder rides too high on the tooth, not creating enough of a hook shape. If that is even on both sides, your chain would cut less powerful. If it is worse on one side, the chain would cut crooked.
Hmm, I use the Timberline chain sharpener tool. Not sure how much you can change how high or low the file sits, but there may be a little wiggle room. I'll have to experiment. One thing I did notice is that doing the teeth on one side versus the other, the file moves so it's either pushing the chain into the bar, in which case it doesn't really move, or pushing it away from the bar, in which case it can flop to the side a bit. It seems to me this could create different angles since the chain doesn't really rotate much when being pushed into the bar, but on the other side it can get pushed out away from the bar more.

GO
 
The bar and chain came together. That said, it does seem like the chain wants to flop to the side a little. I turned the bar over, and this side seems a little better, so i do wonder if the bar groove was getting a little blown out. I looked at it and I can't see any obvious wear marks, so maybe it's just my imagination.

GO
If your chain is wobbling/rocking in the bar groove, either your bar or chain is worn, or both (or the wrong b&c combination).
It will be difficult to sharpen the chain properly as the filing motion will displace/push/tilt the tooth from its proper flat position on the bar.
 
First off, the only way a loop cuts crooked is when the chain is not properly sharpened and the cutters are not asymmetrical with each other (let and right cutters are not equal).

I had a Timberline and gifted it to a friend last year, IMO, basically a worthless tool and real good for non asymmetrical sharpening.

I grind all my loops and customers loops as well now. Repeatability when grinding is much better as the grinder basically eliminates ant human induced errors.

Far as Echo saws are concerned, I use a CS top handle all the time, but be aware that a lot of them will come with a CAT insert in the muffler and it really should be removed for maximum performance or a new non CAT muff installed and removal of the limited caps to tune the powerhead as Echo seems to set the lean from the factory.

Echo saws are a good bargain compared to Stihl in general but be aware that buying one at a box store and needing any warranty service will most likely put you at the back of the line with any authorized dealer, at least that is how it works at the dealership I work at part time. Customer that purchase saws (and other equipment) at my dealer, get preferential service, all others get to wait.

Finally, Echo warrants for 5 years consumer (fair statement) but if the saw has a scored jug or piston from straight gas or bad mix ratio, Echo will not warrant it, ever. They consider that customer abuse. They don't warrant5 bars or chains either as both are considered consumable items.

First thing on a dealer checklist (the dealer I work at) is dump the fuel from the powerhead and see if it has premix or water in it or straight gassed and that determines if it's warranty or not eight away.

I believe that also is the same at any Stihl dealership as well.
 
If you cut a couple cord a year with that 33cc Homelite then you have been working yourself and the saw way too hard. Stepping up to a 50cc saw will make a world of difference. See if you can find an Echo CS-4910. Or go for broke and get the 590 "Timberwolf". There's even a wolf on the bar. You can't beat that. Every other suggestion in this thread is now nullified. Wolf on the bar. Case closed.

As for your Homelite, lot's of good advice here for sharpening going forward. For now though just chuck that bar and chain and start over. You can get those Oregon combos at the hardware stores for cheap. Sounds like it has served you well. Treat it to all new filters and a plug and keep it as a spare.
 

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