Thanks, I’ll did that some as it was the only way I could figure to stay ahead of it. I will work on doing it more. I just see these guys just slice through so I thought I was doing something wrong.
So is that what you folks mean by chip clearance when talking about skip chain? I have some skip square that cuts well (I have only cut green wood with it) - just haven’t figured out how to sharpen it. The local saw shop gave me a file as no around here one uses square and they have had the one file for years. I digress. The full comp semi-chisel I was using stays sharp but it does chatter some in the dead wood. This was a dead tree. At least half of the ones I am asked to cut are dead.
Now about those mismatched cuts. I tend to drift to the right. Maybe I over compensated because I was 3 to 4 “ to the left on that first cut. Other than more practice any tips to close the gap. I cut as far as I can reach on the first cut and try to keep the tip in the cut while on the back side but even then I may leave a thin wafer. If I cut and pivot down then cut to move the pivot point, I get a better ride than just cutting straight down (less bar tip / kick back action) but I end up with the wafer. If I cut straight down the cuts usually match better but it is a rough ride.
Thanks again.
Ron
So is that what you folks mean by chip clearance when talking about skip chain? I have some skip square that cuts well (I have only cut green wood with it) - just haven’t figured out how to sharpen it. The local saw shop gave me a file as no around here one uses square and they have had the one file for years. I digress. The full comp semi-chisel I was using stays sharp but it does chatter some in the dead wood. This was a dead tree. At least half of the ones I am asked to cut are dead.
Now about those mismatched cuts. I tend to drift to the right. Maybe I over compensated because I was 3 to 4 “ to the left on that first cut. Other than more practice any tips to close the gap. I cut as far as I can reach on the first cut and try to keep the tip in the cut while on the back side but even then I may leave a thin wafer. If I cut and pivot down then cut to move the pivot point, I get a better ride than just cutting straight down (less bar tip / kick back action) but I end up with the wafer. If I cut straight down the cuts usually match better but it is a rough ride.
Thanks again.
Ron