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Tree Monkey 661 and .404 chain

Manofstihl066

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It certainly put your top plate to the test. If you get 2 tanks of fuel before it needs to be sharpened, you’re doing great
Well i ran the half skip for almost two tanks later playing around. It was still plenty sharp. Not saying that to be arrogant, but that’s how I’ve been filing lately with no problems.
 
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Time's Standing Stihl

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It certainly put your top plate to the test. If you get 2 tanks of fuel before it needs to be sharpened, you’re doing great

Well i ran the half skip for almost two tanks later playing around. It was still plenty sharp. Not saying that to be arrogant, but that’s how I’ve been filing lately with no problems.
Not saying this to be arrogant, but I've yet to see a 90cc saw very fuel efficient. I would hope you could get more than two tanks on 404 before it needs sharpened, if not it's time to try some different angles
 

Manofstihl066

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Not saying this to be arrogant, but I've yet to see a 90cc saw very fuel efficient. I would hope you could get more than two tanks on 404 before it needs sharpened, if not it's time to try some different angles
Dang buddy, I said I went nearly two tanks on that chain. Seeing how sharp it was after, it prob would’ve gone 3 easy.
 

Time's Standing Stihl

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I was only speculating. That log was pretty tough, but I plan on running it more before filing.
Red oak is hard, wasn't saying that it wasn't. There are definitely harder woods out there that will give your chain a true test. Imo, majority of it is in the bark. That's what will show you if you have a strong corner and good angles.

Just giving you a few pointers, no need to get all defensive. Ik you've only been doing it a handful of months
 

Manofstihl066

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Red oak is hard, wasn't saying that it wasn't. There are definitely harder woods out there that will give your chain a true test. Imo, majority of it is in the bark. That's what will show you if you have a strong corner and good angles.

Just giving you a few pointers, no need to get all defensive. Ik you've only been doing it a handful of months
Takes a lot to get me riled up. I’m a pretty humble guy and if someone has a better way of doing things then I’ll listen. Hardest wood we have around here is live oak, it’ll ruin chains. Confederates used it to line ships with during the American revolution, called them ironside. Don’t want to use that for testing.
 

RI Chevy

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Red oak is hard to begin with when it's green. The piece you cut in your videos was dead red oak that was extremely hard and dried. Very hard on chains. Dead hardened oak will dull your chain twice as fast as green oak. If the top plates withstood 2 tanks and they still looked good, then I say you did real good at sharpening that chain. [emoji106]
 

Manofstihl066

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Red oak is hard to begin with when it's green. The piece you cut in your videos was dead red oak that was extremely hard and dried. Very hard on chains. Dead hardened oak will dull your chain twice as fast as green oak. If the top plates withstood 2 tanks and they still looked good, then I say you did real good at sharpening that chain. [emoji106]
Thank u sir. I thought it was a good test for the tree monkey saw as well. You can’t stop that thing! Lol
 

mdavlee

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Only thing I peeled top plate with was frozen chestnut. Red oak isn't too bad even after 2 years. I only got about 2 tanks per sharpening but that was milling a 30" wide by 9' long cut at a tank per cut
 

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Takes a lot to get me riled up. I’m a pretty humble guy and if someone has a better way of doing things then I’ll listen. Hardest wood we have around here is live oak, it’ll ruin chains. Confederates used it to line ships with during the American revolution, called them ironside. Don’t want to use that for testing.
Its hard for sure it while make yor chain throw sparks.
 

Manofstihl066

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Ran the 404 square filed Full comp rs today. First video here was after a few cuts. I thought it was just as fast or faster than the half skip but smooth as the full skip. Last cut wasn’t very graceful, wanted to pull and see if it loaded the saw.

Had a couple logs of fully cured live oak, so figured why not make a cut to test durability of cutter. Self feeding was a no go in this ironclad wood.

Went back to the red oak log after live oak just to see if any damage was done. Maybe a hair slower, but was still throwing some nice chips. Corner was still in tact after all cutting was done.
 

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Looked really good! So the Full Comp was smoother in the cut than the full-skip and semi-skip?
 
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