Thank you!Chaps are measured by the length from the waist down. They should cover your boots by a minimum of 2". Call your suppliers and ask for the length measurement.
Thank you!Chaps are measured by the length from the waist down. They should cover your boots by a minimum of 2". Call your suppliers and ask for the length measurement.
The climbing I have done with a chainsaw involved, is about the ONLY time that I don't bother with chaps.. Don't do climbing but I can't imagine they'd restrict your movement.
Wear pants.The climbing I have done with a chainsaw involved, is about the ONLY time that I don't bother with chaps.
Im not climbing in a speedo... just kidding.Wear pants.
Philbert
That is my story too except it was only 17 stitches. Chain wasn't even moving. I was cutting storm damage and misread tension on a branch. Thought it was going to go away from me, but instead came back and down when it released. I have great muscle memory and got the chain break on before it hit my leg. Just the pressure of the limb on the bar pushed the teeth into my leg and back about an inch. Can't imagine what that would have looked like if it was running.I went for my annual physical last week, Dr was showing me
His knee, went right across it with a chainsaw, 18 stitches. He said he always wears chaps.. except this time.
Chainsaw kilts, but the long style that goes down to the ankle. Not the short sexy ones. Probably wear the sporran around the back so it doesn't get in the way.I wonder what Scottish sawyers wear?
Philbert
Nice but pricy, (link took me too homepage for some reason, by the way.) Does it make a big difference brand of chaps?I have a pair similar to the Cloggers that I like: https://www.supplycache.com/?srsltid=AfmBOoquQJGHQNzMhmOE76pUa30_loOrRdiWO577Ysx-x7TccNe9-4is
I like the built in tool compartment. I was working on a fire as a contract faller and the safety officer said I should trade in my old oil soaked chaps for a new pair. That was a deal.
I hear you on the priciness. I don't know if some offer more protection than others; that would be worth researching. Only takes once to ruin a leg. But as manager of a thinning crew since 1987, I've seen dozens of guys with cheap chaps have them wear out pretty quickly. Mine are in great shape since I traded in for them in 2003. The other factor is they seem like they would be much more breathable than most of the others.Nice but pricy, (link took me too homepage for some reason, by the way.) Does it make a big difference brand of chaps?
I'm running some bottom dollar Stahl chaps. (Forget what I paid, but I don't remember being that much.) 2nd pair of chaps, I "lent" a friend a pair which were bottom dollar Huskies. Only real difference is my Stahl have zippers, the others had snaps.
As long as they do the job I'll run them. Nice climbing chainsaw pants are in the "wishlist".
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