If the bar/wood is small enough to allow chip clearance, and the PH utilized has power to spare for the given B&C One can go quite aggressive on the rakers.
Once the cutters bite and the engine loads up it is a fairly exhilarating experience.
Although, DO NOT:
- bore cut
- limb/branch
- cut small OD wood
- be careless
Even though I enjoy it, cutting with low rakers will wear you out physically if they're so low that it pulls the saw in and stalls it.
I enjoy explaining the reasoning behind lowering rakers to customers (because the tooth slants down, etc) and watching the light bulbs come on in their brains. We use a Franzen automatic chain sharpener so it's no extra work to take them down on customers' chains.
A ported 2188 with 36” of low rakers bucking all day will really wear you out.
You’ll get less stalling if you don’t dog until the second tooth up, the one in line with the bottom of the bar vs. the lowest one. Back barring will stall less too but both will wear you out.
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