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...What colour should I paint it?...
...fire engine red of course!!!
Another excellent interesting post. So... those wheels won't get in the way when milling?
...What colour should I paint it?...
...fire engine red of course!!!
Another excellent interesting post. So... those wheels won't get in the way when milling?
Well... that makes sense, was a dumb question now that I think about it....The wheels are designed to come off when milling. The bolts don't go thru the rails - the heads slide into the top of T-Track, two turns of the wing nuts and the wheels can slide off the rails...
... I just got 20,000 lbs (9000 kilos?) of gravel delivered yesterday for a garage slab project... milling the 28" maple log, and modifying the mill will have to wait.
I like how you seem to always take the time to finish stuff, like a nice paint job on a piece you make. When I make jigs for the shop, I'm usually too anxious to try it, tweak it and then put it into use. Thus even though at that point it looks like Fred Flintstone made it, I often fail to take that extra time right away to put a nice finish on the jig, sand or round over the edges etc. Only after I've gotten it dialed in and used it for a while and get tired of seeing it unfinished do I take the time to put the finishing touches on it.
. . . . . I'm sure I have a couple of old billy cart wheels on an axle some where in the garden shed.
This is no biggie even though it has taken me several evenings to sort out.
When stopping midway along a slab, eg to refuel, I can't just reach across the log to turn the aux oil off so I have to walk around the long.
This is because my aux oil talk is down low and the taps are underneath it like this.
With a longer bar the problem is only going to get get worse.
What often happens is the walk around the log to turn off the oiler becomes a PITA so I often just let it drip while I make a quick adjustment, then I forget it's on and I get distracted doing something else and before long half the aux oil tank has emptied itself onto the ground. Here is my solution.
Old bike gear change lever.
Connect cable to modified tap and spring mechanism.
Even though I have a needle valve installed for fine flow control the click gear lever also seems to provide reasonably reproducible flow control as well!
Could it be possible to drill a small hole in the chainsaw inlet and fix a vacuum pipe onto it?
I don't know if its been brought up on here before (I did a search for the term "Scotoiler" but found no results) but theres an automatic chain oiling device used on motorcycles called a Scotoiler*, it uses vacuum from a pipe connected to the inlet rubbers to move a diaphragm which opens a valve, the valve is adjustable for flow (although I doubt it would flow enough instandard form for chainsaw.) and the valve allows oil to gravity feed onto the motorcycle chain.
Any use to you?
Admittedly, I've not even looked at the inlet stub of mine to see if a vacuum pipe could be fitted to it.
Excellent idea but it has a couple of things that need sorting.
One is that there are times such as when warming up and cooling down the saw, pausing to find wedges etc that the engine is running but one doesn't want the oil to flow.
The other is running a vacuum line from the power head across the mill rails to the oiler is not that easy since the height of the power head above the oiler changes with height of cut so one would have to building a flexible extension into the pipe. This has the potential to get caught up in things.
Another is peculiar to my mill whereby I can swap the chain out without removing the chain saw from the mill but it requires no other connection of any kind between the power head and the mill otherwise the chain cannot sneak past - this is very to difficult to explain without showing it to you. This could be gotten around with some sort of quick connect.
What I like is the principle of coupling oil flow to some aspect of engine operation - I'll be thinking about that for a while now. Thanks
Excellent idea but it has a couple of things that need sorting.
One is that there are times such as when warming up and cooling down the saw, pausing to find wedges etc that the engine is running but one doesn't want the oil to flow.
The other is running a vacuum line from the power head across the mill rails to the oiler is not that easy since the height of the power head above the oiler changes with height of cut so one would have to building a flexible extension into the pipe. This has the potential to get caught up in things.
Another is peculiar to my mill whereby I can swap the chain out without removing the chain saw from the mill but it requires no other connection of any kind between the power head and the mill otherwise the chain cannot sneak past - this is very to difficult to explain without showing it to you. This could be gotten around with some sort of quick connect.
What I like is the principle of coupling oil flow to some aspect of engine operation - I'll be thinking about that for a while now. Thanks
Bob, thats why the oiler runs off the clutch drive, so it only oils/runs when the chain is spinning. Now if anyone can rig something up its you!!
Oh boy now that's a challenge if I ever hear one. I have already started thinking - optical sensor - gets dirty too quickly, sound level sensor - promising - small amplifier - relay switch - to EM tap - needs a battery - battery goes flat - needs an indicator LED - getting a bit technical - back to drawing board - good fun though!
Is there a cold weather version of your saw with the electrically heated handles?
If theres spare power avaliable from the coil (and I have read through my manual and still don't know if theres spare wires on my 038 AV super that will do it) then you might be able to use that to power it.
As thew switch is at the powerhead end its no bother to reach it, a bit of wire to the pump and a contoller for the pump.
That way the saw produces the power (might be AC but a bridge rectifier isn't hard to make) for the pump.
No fancy sensors to clog up or fail either.
Thats a really good idea but still has a wire that will get in the way of my chain removal and it will need some additional control so that it doesn't release the oil until it is above a certain RPM threshold.
Oh boy now that's a challenge if I ever hear one. I have already started thinking - optical sensor - gets dirty too quickly, sound level sensor - promising - small amplifier - relay switch - to EM tap - needs a battery - battery goes flat - needs an indicator LED - getting a bit technical - back to drawing board - good fun though!
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