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Thread: Chainsaw chain sharpening

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Lewisville, TX
    Posts
    240

    Chainsaw chain sharpening

    I have a couple of chains that I need to sharpen. Any good suggestions? File, Dremel???

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Mid Michigan
    Posts
    468
    I use a bar mount file guide. It doesn't have a very big learning curve & works good.
    I don't like freehand filing, to hard to hold a consistent angle after repeated sharpenings.
    Baileys has them, stock# 15200

    http://www.baileys-online.com/store/USA.htm

    Ed

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Dayton, TX
    Posts
    3,173
    Steve, I've seen the dremel one work and although it says it works for three different sized chains, the guy had to hone out the holes to make it fit his 3/8" chain... it wouldn't sit deep enough in the chain to sharpen the whole tooth. Of course it could have been a bad one. I just use a file and have another file in a guide that I use from time to time to make sure the angle is right. When you get used to it, you can keep it pretty much on the money. Plus, if I'm in the woods, I don't have to worry about it. The key with the file is to not let the chain go too long before you hit it again and take real light cuts... it helps to keep the angle right on too.

    Ernie

  4. #4
    Steve,

    This is what I use for my STIHL chains.....

    http://www.forestapps.com/pferd/pferdtool.htm

    Real easy to use. A couple swipes (I do about 3 per tooth....takes about 5 min) after I use it and my chains sharp for the next time I need it.
    Joe
    ------------------------------------------------


    Experience...is simply the name we give our mistakes.

    Oscar Wilde
    .................................................. ..................

  5. #5
    I just use a file, no holder. Been doing it too long. You'll get used to just a file after a while. Remember to use a flat file and take your drag down a bit after sharpening the teeth 3-4 times. There should be a gauge that came with your saw for this.


  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Aurora, Co.
    Posts
    391
    I recently recieved a battery operated Dremel and I can tell you that it took the work out of sharpening my chainsaw blade. It used to take me about 10 minutes to sharpen the blade that I now do in about one minute. The sharpening system comes with three sets of stones and one of them should fit most of the saw blades made. It is nice to be able to sharpen my saw while I am at the wood lot where there is no power to use other types of sharpening systems. I wish I had bought this little Dremel years ago.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Midwest
    Posts
    2,043
    Steve,
    I do mine by hand. I use an Oregon file and guide to do the work. The guide has angle markings that align parallel with the bar to achieve the right angle. The guide slides over the teeth to achieve the right cutting depth for the teeth. They make a separate guide for taking the rakers down after every 3-4 sharpenings. Sharpening takes me less than 5 min for a 56 tooth chain.

    Here is a link to general chainsaw maintenance info that also talks about chain sharpening. Obviously Oregon is trying to sell products. I'm not affiliated with Oregeon at all but have used their products and found their site helpful. Take their specific tool recommendations with a grain of salt. Other companies offer the same products. If you are on dial-up it will take a while to load but try this site...

    http://www.oregonchain.com/tech/ms_manual/ms_02.pdf
    Last edited by Dick Strauss; 03-14-2006 at 2:02 PM.

  8. #8
    I use a file, and the Lee Valley file guide that clamps onto the bar. I can sharpen the chain on my Stihl (16" bar) in about five minutes or so.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    New Zealand
    Posts
    371
    I use a round file and a little guide plate that helps keep the angle right.

    Sharpen the chain often, if it looks blunt it's way to far gone and will take a lot of file / grinder work to get the chain back into shape. If the chrome edge of the tooth gets rounded over you have to file back to a clean edge if you want it to stay sharp. By learning how to hand sharpen you can easily touch up the chain in the field after a couple of tanks of gas. Only takes a couple of strokes with the file to keep the edge keen. After cutting for an hour it's a nice break to sit down on a stump for 5 mins and touch up the chain.

    If you hit a nail or a rock then a grinder is the best way to get the chain back into shape, but in that case I just drop the chain off at my local dealer and he knocks it back into shape for a few bucks.

    And yeah, remember to check the raker heights, you dont have to do it every time, but eventually you have to take them down as the cutters wear back and get lower.

    Cheers

    Ian

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Columbia, MD
    Posts
    45

    Thumbs up

    After sharpening with a file for years I recently bout a dremel and stone sized for my chain. Dremel is way to go. Quick & easy. Going to buy a 12 volt for the road.

  11. Wink

    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Hayes
    I have a couple of chains that I need to sharpen. Any good suggestions? File, Dremel???
    .... I use a rattail file in the woods. A bench grinder in the shop, see pics

    http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?t=14988

    .... Bench grinder tends to keep the angle true on both sides of the link. So as you cut, the saw does NOT favor the right or left side. A true straight line cut .

    .
    Every man’s work is always a portrait of himself.

  12. #12
    I started out using a file then switched to a dremel. But I've gone back to the file. The dremel bits wear down too fast and once they start wearing the smaller diameter makes for a different angle on the tooth edge. I couldn't get a consistent edge all around the chain and it causes the saw to cut in a curve and ultimately bind. If you're going to use the dremel be very careful, they cut fast and wear fast. Replace the bits ever few sharpenings.

    Also, if you sharpen with a dremel and then need to touch it up with a file in the field after nicking rocks or nails, the file probably won't match up with the grind of the dremel bit.

    The cheap Oregon sharpening setups work pretty darned good.

  13. I got the Oregon sharpening file guide thing, it works very well, and it is simple to use. I could sharpen the chain on my mill (two different angles, as it was a ripping chain) in about 15 minutes tops.

    I bought the dremel bits too, but did not end up using them, they take off too much too easy, IMHO.

    Cheers!

  14. #14

    I'm with Stu on this one

    I found the Oregon jig to be fast, easy, and precise. Gives the perfect tooth shrpnes, undercut and angle on every tooth, and will out cut just about any shop sharpened chain any day. I couldn't find the oregon and got a Gransburg jig and it's identical to the oregon and got it through Baily's


    equally important is the raker tooth. I found this card jig to be pretty nice to use


  15. #15

    should have used this pic instead


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