MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,074
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Just make sure to get the wheel low enough so the side of the wheel hits the face of the tooth, on some low profile chains I have to flatten the bottom of the wheel to get it low enough. You'll have chains that cut. Steve
The bottom of the wheel does nothing when sharpening, it's the side of the wheel that needs to hit the face of the tooth. The only time I do any profiling is to get the wheel low enough on a picco chain. The biggest mistake people make is having a well rounded wheel that is set to high resulting in the face of the tooth getting no hook angle. And too high rakers. Steve
Sure nothing wrong with asking. I've been sharping chains for over 30 years like mentioned above, everyone likes the way they cut. I'd have to ask how does a rounded wheel give the face of the tooth hook, this is a wheel not a file and there's no way a wheel can get in there like a file. My method is close to square fileing which cuts good. Also I use the same 1/8" wheel for everything and very rarely have to shape the wheel except for low profile chains. Steve
Yes it's shaped like a file, why. To get at the tooth like a file the wheel would have to be horizontal and that's not going to happen. I know your going by the book but give my method a try and see what you think.. Steve
Hook is the angle of the face of the tooth on any saw blade, more hook causes the tooth to pull its self into the wood . 0 or a negative hook it would want to push its self out of the and would require a lot of pressure to cut. As I mentioned above I think the biggest mistake people make with a grinder is not getting the wheel low enough with a round profiled wheel resulting in no or negative hook. 3/8 chain has a nice tall tooth, when sharpening a wore out low profile chain you wont want a rounder wheel, you'll need to dress the wheel to a point on the left side. Steve
I see what you are getting at and it makes good sense. When I grind my chains, I do not make them "deeper". That would be pointless as the cut is from the top of the blade, not the bottom. Hook angle is important, from what I read. From what I observe with my grinder, I see no difference between its results and a hand sharpened blade as far as the hook angle goes. I'm sure I could see it under magnification.
One thing to think about regarding hand filing VS grinder is that the hand file in the Oregon hand guide does not get under the blade 100 percent either. 20% of the file diameter is kept above the face of the blade. Oregon does not recommend getting all the way under the tooth and Oregon's guide will not allow the file to get all the way under the tooth.
All I know is the blades are flinging chips and pulling themselves into the wood very well and my hands don't get cramps operating the grinder like they do operating the hand file. :thumbsup: