I think chain sharpening is the new best oil thread. Or HST vs Gear thread.![]()
At least it isn't about which is the best rifle for deer hunting. :laughing:
I think chain sharpening is the new best oil thread. Or HST vs Gear thread.![]()

I've thought about building something similar to fit over my ATV trailer. I have a lot of small hardwood (2-3 inches), it would be nice to reduce the handling.My solution to keeping logs out of the dirt when cutting into firewood sized logs. Of course now that I have pallet forks for the tractor, not sure if I will use them to load this or just cut from the forks.
I love this rack though. Buck your trees into 8' lengths. The you get to stand up straight while cutting, it keeps the logs at the exact place for cutting them to the correct length and it keeps them pinned in a cage so they can't move while cutting.
Also don't forget to grease your bar tip.
Not really necessary. Once you do grease it, you need to keep greasing it to push out accumulated dirt that becomes stuck in the grease. Most of the pros I know are in the "Never Grease It" camp. I'm not a pro, but I never grease, and I wear out a bar long before the sprocket in the tip fails.
I got an Oregon 410 bench sharpener last year. I use it on chains that have been hand sharpened many times. Mostly to even up the cutter lengths but also to correct angles that are a little off. Also most chains eventually get some teeth where the hard chrome on the top is a little chipped and it would take too long to cut the tooth back to 100% good chrome with a file. When there's more than a few or it doesn't seem that sharp after hand sharpening it's time to use the grinder.
I've yet to try square ground. The files are insanely expensive and I already know how to file and grind regular chain. If I cut a lot of big wood I'd be more inclined to try it.
The rule is grease it every time you use it or don't grease it at all. Some of the bars for Stihl and Dolmar/makita and maybe other brands don't even have the grease hole in the sprocket.
Isn't that basically what I said?
It takes a little practice to get consistent results. There's a tiny bit of flex in the head so you need to hold the handle in a consistent way. They had some of the 500-series models on sale a while back and I can't help wondering if they're sturdier and flex less. But the 410 is far better than the HF model I played with in the store. The HF can probably be tuned and adjusted to work better than out of the box but I just wanted to get to work (and I found the 410 on sale).
If I was getting one for a shop I'd get a 500 series model but the 410's just fine for home use. Oregon has a video on you tube that helped me understand how it works.