Congrats! Great saw, of course. Sounds like the right choice. Love the half wrap for firewood.
Good advice on the powerhead-only. The "saw shop" here will swap the sprocket out at no charge. They sell all the pro saws as powerhead-only (but won't grind a square chain).
Hope you enjoy running the new saw!
Thanks man!
Ran the saw again today. Really like it. I think I will find a pair of full wraps. Sometimes my father is right, he warned that since I am used to full wraps I might flip her over automatically like there is a handle there and no handle there could be bad.
Got a new ignition module for my 395 today. It’s running again. Mighty rough though. The last ignition mod I tried as a $13 special and it loosened itself up (the body metal was soft and the bolts couldn’t hold it) and ran into the flywheel gauging it. I think this is why it is running rough. Might try to smooth it out a bit with sand paper.
I would like to get it running best I can for max sell-ability or to keep as the backup.
Update: cleaned up the flywheel with some emery cloth and put it back together. Running right and strong. Now to keep or sell…
Last edited by Hood26; 11-19-2023 at 02:34 PM.
The answer is probably I should take it in to a shop, but, having a little issue when I start my 362. Right when the engine kicks on the chain rotates without hitting the trigger until I then purposely hit the trigger to rev it up and, I presume, burn off some fuel, because then when I let go of the trigger the chain stops rotating as it should without adjusting anything else.
Thoughts on what needs to be adjusted?
I don't claim to know much about chainsaws, but they use a centrifugal clutch right? If so the answer to the clutch sticking on small engines is usually take it apart and clean it (or replace shoes or the whole thing it if it's significantly worn).
Is that answer at me? So, it sounds like my clutch is the issue?
Is the idle higher than normal til you hit the throttle? Is this happening during cold starts, where the engine starts on half choke? If so, that's normal. If it's happening on warm starts where you start it in run, sounds likely to be the choke lever is sticking. With the saw off take the air filter off so you can see the butterfly valves in the carb and go from full choke, to half choke to run then hit the throttle, the butterflies should move with each. Then go from off to run and see if the butterflies are closing or sticking.
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Standard maintenance should include pulling the clutch cover and removing the accumulated junk.
I've also seen it occur with the idle set too high
Edit - Also your chain shouldn't be spinning at start up anyways because the saw should be started with the chain brake on.
Last edited by oldnew_guy; 12-05-2023 at 11:25 AM.
This.
Chain brake on for starting.
I don't always remember, but the manual says I should.
This doesn't mean something isn't loose though. I'm sorry I don't know what it would be. I run a fairly loose chain and my 462 hasn't had this issue even when I forget the brake.
Curious, does it do the same thing on a hot restart or only on cold start?
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this^^
my standard maintenance routine after a day of operation is to pull the covers to dig out sawdust & smoo, also clean out clutch area, also clean out bar slot & flip bar, sharpen chain or chains of which i would carry 2 spares, if you think about it a dirty filter will alter the mixture of the engine so i swap the airfilter ( a spare is cheap ) for a clean one which i then wash & dry ... the saw always runs the same
a chainsaw is a very high performance engine and should be treated as such
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
This guy used to sell chainsaws and now sells wine. The old school two man saws are nuts!![]()
I like that display. Grandpa went from selling chainsaws to animal feeds. Wine would have been more fun.
Started working up a rotted out old deadfall oak yesterday. Interesting to run one saw with full skip and another with semiskip. Both square chisel. Both chain cut equally fast in the green wood, but on the dead an hardened wood the semi was a clear winner.
Got a new grinder to get dialed in. The angles are the manufacturer’s settting at the moment.
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It’s pretty close. I think I have adjusted it a bit since that picture from a few weeks ago. I ran it by a few of my cutter friends.
What are you seeing? I am happy to keep learning more. There is a lot of art and science in grinding square and everyone seems to have their take on it.
It’s all about the corner. This is the iteration I cut with yesterday.
I will start hand filling the gullet out when I take care of the riders.
Well, I’ve never worked with a full chisel chain so that might be a factor here, and I’ve always hand filed. But I guess I kind of expect a more extended top plate with a corner on it, maybe a touch more gullet. But hey, if it’s working…
That picture above looks more like what I’m used to.
The last pict is looking better but if i had to guess I would say the stone seems to be taking out the gullet like its not for that kind of chain ?
I always use a a hand filing jig at home which makes for a sharp chain
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
Square chisel is fascinating. Cuts faster but dulls faster? Do you treat the rakers the same?
Looking at that tooth profile I don't really see how one would sharpen that chain in the field ??
I had bud who cut the big wood out on the coast, he said the company did not allowed them to hand file in the field, instead they give em 3 sharp chains in the morning which they hand in at night to be re-sharpened get 3 more in the AM
Buddy said it was too scary bucking stems sticking 30 ft in the air and he quit
Last edited by XXX-er; 03-20-2024 at 11:14 AM.
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
The angle of the top plate changes the aggressiveness and durability. More angle is more aggressive and more square is more durable. Dad is running more aggressive because he was always cutting clean, green, softwoods. I am going more durable because of cutting all kinds of firewood.
The stone and grinder are definitely for this chain; however, I need to keep fiddling. There are a few adjustments on the grinder itself and then the main adjustments are on how the stone is shaped itself, I am using Simington’s stone shape right now, but may change it. There are two diamond dressers with adjustable angles. One is for the top of the stone and the other for the side.
Square can be filled in the field with a square file, hit it’s a PIA especially trying to get the same angles as the grinder. I would rather swap chain. A few minutes of swapping the chain and keep cutting fast
There is the conventional wisdom that square dulls faster, but I think it’s a push. Dirt dulls the chain equally fast, what is different though it the break ability. A square tooth chain running fast through wood and then hitting wire or rock can break right off, especially on a chain that has been ground a lot.
https://youtu.be/IqTfvxFDo5g?si=7pVYSrT1PLUmReK0
Lots of YouTube coming up now. People are getting hip to square.
Handle the rakers just like round. A few swipes every grind. There are raker and gullet grinders but they are expensive and not too worth it.
Thanks the response. A lot about square chisel that I did not know.
Awesome! I think you're real close with the last image. Looks like maybe a bit of top beak? I hand file square and trend toward a little bit of side beak just to make sure I keep the outside top plate angle and that corner intact the whole way across. I am still hemming and hawing about a Simington, but deep down I know it will pay for itself.
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For the greater good -
Falling and bucking in the woods - square is unbeatable, imo. Adds precision ability to falling face cuts, and speed to the back cut/limbing/bucks..
There a touch of top and side. I need to shape the stone a bit I think.
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