Breaking in a New Chain Saw Chain

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djauto

djauto

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Joined
Feb 15, 2008
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61
Location
Bellingham, WA
Dexron II or III?

Don't act stupid on this one, you know only to use Mercon on the pre 78 chains and Dexron III works on all 79 and later chains. Dexron II can be used though on 79 to 94 chains if Dexron III is not available.

:poke:























If you are new to the site, just run the stinkin' chain with oil in the saw and don't worry about it. If you feel the desire to soak it, then by all means soak it. I don't.
 
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djauto

djauto

ArboristSite Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2008
Messages
61
Location
Bellingham, WA
tsk tsk.

Dex II and III don't officially exist anymore so you have to use Dex VI which is backwards compatible. :greenchainsaw:

Now wait a second, dont confuse every one, do you mean Dex IV, Dex V, Or Dex VI?

And runnning Dex II, III or any others when specs call for Mercon can be a bad idea.
 
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stihl sawing
Joined
Feb 16, 2008
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Across the bridge.
After years of over tightening the nuts on the Dolmar with a 1/2" drive ratchet the studs broke. On inspection they seemed to be stretched. I now use a Stalwhille flexi socket wrench. Its a lot shorter than the ratchet and is a nice tool to use as well.
Yup, Know what ya mean.you can tighten one up too much. I also use a shorty ratchet.
 
davefr

davefr

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I always treat my new chains in a bucket of liquid nitrogen. The affect is transformation from austenite to martensite which increases their strength and hardness. Just do a search under "cryogenic hardening".

Once you do it just throw away the silly files and jigs and chains will stay sharp for years and years.
 
Hugenpoet

Hugenpoet

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I always treat my new chains in a bucket of liquid nitrogen. The affect is transformation from austenite to martensite which increases their strength and hardness. Just do a search under "cryogenic hardening".

Once you do it just throw away the silly files and jigs and chains will stay sharp for years and years.

I wonder how a pair of 24 lbs nuts would perform after they were "cryogenically hardend"?
 

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