New Stuff

The chainsaw ebooklet has been added to the ever-growing sidebar. If you want to know everything there is to know about chainsaw use and maintenance, for god’s sake don’t expect to find it here. But the booklet’s not a bad place to start.

To accommodate it and (who knows) maybe other stuff in the future, I’ve added a new page called Freebies which is available on the top blog thingy.

I’ve also fiddled with the sidebar more, just because it amuses me.

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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One Response to New Stuff

  1. CaliforniaJoe says:

    Last weekend I worked with my Husqvarna and invariably had to think of Joel while I filed the chain. Think about that, Joel:
    Before I even bought a chainsaw, I got an introduction to it by a professional woodchuck and chainsaw repairman/teacher. He not only taught me maintenance and felling trees, but also advised me to file the chain in time. In time = every time the cutting performance goes down.

    If I have sand in the bark, the edge on the chain teeth doesn’t even last for one friggin’ fuel tank. Even if the wood is clean, it barely lasts longer than one fuel tank. So I file quite often. One stroke with the round file is usually enough. The depth gauge has to be filed much less frequently.
    Filing my 15″ bar takes barely 2 minutes, filing the 26″ bar of the Stihl MS660 on the portable sawmill takes about 3 minutes. The difference is incredible. The chain and bar live longer this way. You save on fuel and chain oil. You can cut a pallet to pieces almost like wielding a light saber. Well, *almost* 😉
    I use an electric chainsaw to cut the saw mill cutoffs to firewood. Last weekend, I hit a high quality hardened screw with the chain. This would have *killed* an expensive circular saw blade, tungsten carbide tips and all. Took me 3 minutes to fix the damage by filing some extra strokes. Presto.
    When in doubt, I always use the chain. That’s why I still have the first OME blades in both my circular saws, and I did thousands of hours of construction work on my home over the years.

    2 weekends ago I witnessed two clueless guys cut up a 4″ pine on the neighbouring patch. Took them almost 1 minute to cut through, would have taken me less than 2 seconds (my Husky has 2x horsepower though). Their chain was dull. Only days later I slashed through my 18″ logs in no time with the Husky. Crass.
    I never once gave my chain away to get sharpened. All I got was several minutes of instruction from a guy who knows his shit.
    Think about it. File your own.
    Oh, and if you store your fuel in metal jerrycans, it lasts longer and you get less starting problems. Plus you safe on the fuel which otherwise would pass through the plastic and go to waste. Yes, part of the fuel goes AWOL thorugh the plastic, that’s why the plastic containers get hollow cheeks over time.

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