hey fellas ,im tony marks and am glad to be here.
my question is about gauge . i have 3 saws in the 50 cc range and the stihl 028is the only one with 63. i recently purchased an solo 667 at 69 cc. im thinking it has .50 gauge. this is my first saw of that size and im a little concerned with the chain holding togather.. ive never had any trouble with this but ive never had a powerhead this big either. i dont need it in the neck or where ever..
thanks a head of time. :)
Tony
50 gauge will hold,I have ran it on 066's with no trouble.I run Carltons A1 3/8 50 gauge on my 034 and 044 and have even ran it on my 120cc 22hp 088KD with no failure.Seth
(https://forestryforum.com/images/YaBBImages/userpics/088Kd3.jpg)
Tony,
I agree with Seth, .050 will serve you well.
I looked at that picture of Seth's and my mind read "Ethyl" instead of Stihl. I was going to say something about Seth naming his saws and, in a split second, realized my error. Kind of a neat concept though, eh Seth? Have you named any of your saws? :D
Tom, fess up.
Who is "Ethyl" , and why does she remind you of a chainsaw? :D
Ethyl was one "high testy" babe, a real rip snorter, rippem-up but full of gas. :-/ :D
thanks for the input fellas. i just didnt want to wear a saw chain as a necklace, when i go thru the pearly gates. :) i work solo so im careful, but wasnt sure about this issue. thanks again.
course theys nothin ever really sure doing his type work is there.
cept u sure better be careful.
I use a .050 for milling and it holds up well.
If you break a chain it will usually come off the bar and fly out in front of you or down across the chainsaw chaps that everyone here wears. ::)
this aint good but i see very few chaps around here.
think im going that route tho. ive hit my left leg many times and never really got hurt. mite be a different story with this bigger saw.
my experience is when im tired enough that the follow thru gets to my leg its past time to quit.ill be looking for a good set ,nothin fancy just enough to give the protection i need.
ps i have witnessed a saw cut. it opened it up pretty good ,and the strange thing is it took a while to start bleeding.turned out to be a serious injury.
Yeah, and what a lot of people don't think about is that it cuts a trough that doesn't close up too good. It looks just like the kerf it puts in a log but it doesn't take nearly as long.
When a chainsaw wound heals, if you're lucky, you're skin is a quarter of an inch shorter. If you get a bone, then so are you. :-/
I've been touched and know. Hopefully never again, nor ever seriously.
speaking of chains can anybody tell me what degree angle to put on a chain to make it rip for a chainsaw mill? Thanks cecil
If you're talking top plate it`s 0 to 10 degrees.