Where you at in Mid Michigan area, I sharpen my own chains but would like to see how you sharpen yours.
I'm close enough to I-75 and I-69 to visit just about any member in Southern lower MI at the drop of a hat, and I sharpen anything I can get my hands on. ("hard work dispels worry" Maggie to Doris) My few little tricks get very good results from the cheapest HFT sharpener by using its weakness (hardly rigid) to best advantage.
Briefly, use the flex of the machine to bring the wheel down in a j-like stroke. Hold it to the right as you come down, then wiggle it to the left as 'tap' the wheel against the tooth face. "tap, tap, tap" then hold the wheel again to the right of its 'give' so as not to contact the tooth
at all on the upstroke. If failing that last bit your rake angle would match the upstroke path (sloppy if a worn or cheapo machine, so vital) vs the intended angle. Smooth contact of wheel to work was never important enough to matter.
The chains I do are for guys that buck 12" dia ash 'leaners' (post ash-borer death) with 16' saws, so 'rakers' (aka depth gages) are removed to try to teach the guys to use the saws as saws and not like grinders. Full RPM will cause the chain to skip, limit 'peel' per tooth, and cause unnecessary wear. "feeds and speeds" for all materials.

When ~1/3 of your chips are more like sawdust, you should have rotated to a sharp chain already.
Set up: With motor off, adjust the wheel to correct depth of the gullet. Adjust the stop so that as you rotate the wheel by hand the high spot of the 'wobble' just touches the tooth. This'll get you .010" or more peel when powered up. I use a dial caliper to monitor tooth
length, so as to balance L to R height and strive for the straightest cut. I'd have posted youtube videos of just such things (machine shop tricks) but not enough folks trust the quality of pro bono work and I'm doing other chores while waiting for more work and movie production help.
I suggest a post-sharpen rinsing in kero and 'drip drying' of chains to minimize swarf (grit, detritus, etc) causing wear to the bar. If/as the wheel gets rounded on one side, just flip it over to use the sharper corner to keep rake going nearest to full gullet depth.
