This could be due to my misconception that 3/8 chain was wider than a .325 chain. There was a guy on YouTube that switched his 550 ton 3/8 and it cut way slower with a similar chain. I could only reason that this hard to me because the chain/cutter/kerf was more significant.OK 40 years of saws, chains and bars, and I never knew thickness of the driver on the chain had anything to do with cutting speed.
The driver thickness must match the bar groove,
The pitch of the chain (.325, 3/8 picco, 3/8 which is NOT the same as picco or extended pitch or whatever the manufacturer wants to call it) must match the sprocket and the bar nose sprocket.
There are various types of cutters on each of there types of chain (lo pro, safety, regular, round tooth, square tooth, etc.) and different rakers to go with the teeth.
So now I have either explained it or muddied the waters further.
For the bar you have pictured it takes .325 pitch with .050 (50 gauge) drivers 66 drivers in length.
The type of tooth is whatever you want to use. 90% of the chain leaving out shop is a single raker square tooth design. Stihl calls it rapid super.
You can use any make chain on any saw, as long as the gauge, pitch and number of drivers match.
I hope this helps.
The numbers on the bar and chain seem to be a fit/match. SP33G chain 0.325 pitch, 0.050 drivers Bar is 0.325 pitch 0.050 groove.
Is this the chain that you said "jumped off" when you did the autotune?
If so check over all the drivers carefully that they are not damaged/peened. If they are damaged they will be thicker at damaged spots and bind in the bar groove. You can fix damaged drivers if they are not too bad with a small flat file or a dremel.
Yup as mentioned above. Drive links have burrs on them on the tip going into bar. Only needs to be enough that you can feel with fingernail and it will bind especially on new bar.
I’ll tell you what I think I’m gonna register my saw tonight on the website and take it into a local dealer and have them look at it cause I’m about done with this.
It’s hard not to feel good though with this little girl sitting next to the XP though.
My bad. I already did that and thought I posted that the bar is perfectly smooth and straight and the chains drivers are perfect aswell. It’s getting bound by the sprocket not performing as it should I believe.It will take you 30 seconds to take a look at the drivers on the chain..........
Nothing wrong with your B&C.
I put my Guage on all 3 bars and the new Husky is the tightest. It's because there is a light coat of paint in the bar groove that will wear quickly as you use it. My Speedcut bar is very new but has no paint in the bar groove so that is the difference.
When I got my 550xp I noticed the same thing you did.
If I put the chain on the bar and hold it I can spin it just fine. When I put the bar/chain on the saw and don’t tighten the cover nuts it also seems to spin fine. But as soon as I tighten the nuts it gets jammed as it comes around the back of the sprocket over the top from my observations.
if it’s really broken/factory defect it with be that much more of a shame as this is the only saw I have purchased brand new
Sorry, JD BUT WRONG/ confused. 325 NOT SAME AS 3/8 or 3/8picco. 3/8=0.375, NOT 0.325Same as 3/8 vs 3/8 low pro (picco)... the pitch is the same but the reduction of the chasis size changes the size of the rims /sprockets required. I suspect in the case of the new .325" variations the difference would be fairly minimal, although probably not insignificant.
I’m a novice at best I just do t get it. Are there more chain options in 3/8?
The narrow kerf (.050) also seems like a better choice than the wider .058. Wouldn’t a wider kerf would only make your saw have to work harder.
Please enlighten my day.
If I put the chain on the bar and hold it I can spin it just fine. When I put the bar/chain on the saw and don’t tighten the cover nuts it also seems to spin fine. But as soon as I tighten the nuts it gets jammed as it comes around the back of the sprocket over the top from my observations.
if it’s really broken/factory defect it with be that much more of a shame as this is the only saw I have purchased brand new
In the video you said that you can't even pull the chain when it is only put on the bar, now there is no problem with that. Something doesn't add up here...
Generally I believe that everything should be in proportion to the power of the saw. Bigger cylinder, stronger chassis, stronger crank, longer bar, wider chain etc. That's why bigger saws come with bigger chains. The only reason I can see to bend the rules slightly would be the ease of only needing one file size or one sprocket.