Best chain for trimming apple trees

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
joecool85

joecool85

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 10, 2007
Messages
1,354
Location
Maine
Hey guys, I was helping my dad thin out some branches on his apples trees with my 339 and it did a great job, except that it seems to make a rougher cut than my old Poulan 2375 did. The 339 is running .325 full chisel chain, my old 2375 had been running a semi-chisel low pro 3/8 chain.

What do you guys run for trimming trees? Should I get a low-pro chain for my saw? Or maybe a micro-lite setup with narrow kerf?
 
joecool85

joecool85

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 10, 2007
Messages
1,354
Location
Maine
3/8 peco low profile small tooth small cut. You wull find less ripping , less tearing on the bark. If the cut is not too big use a sharp hand saw/ pole saw Razor cut teeth

Yeah, I was thinking 3/8 low pro would make sense. Now...can I get that on a 339xp?

**edit**
Turns out that I can run .325, 3/8 or even 1/4 if I wanted - all with a spur sprocket setup. However, my saw has a rim setup right now and that is only available for .325. I'll probably run it that way for quite a while then. At least till I need to replace the rim. Then I can go get a bar, chain and spur sprocket setup to do the switch. For now it's fine as 95% of the time I'm using it for limbing trees that will be firewood anyway.
 
Last edited:
joecool85

joecool85

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 10, 2007
Messages
1,354
Location
Maine
One of them had a good deal of cutting due to ants getting into a partially rotten portion of the trunk. Most of the trees got only a light trimming, but there are enough of them that it takes quite a while doing it with a hand saw.

We did the cutting about 3 weeks ago, I was a little worried about cutting during their growth period as I normally would do it in the fall. But the more reading I did the more I heard "cut in the spring", "cut in the summer", "cut in the fall" and even a few "cut in the winter".

So I ended up doing what one man said, "cut when your saw is sharp and you have the time."
 
mic687

mic687

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 3, 2008
Messages
358
Location
Midland Michigan
I trimmed mine with my MS192 with a pico mini narrow chain and my Silky hand saw. That is until the ants got the better of it and then I trimmed it with my MS650 right to the ground:chainsaw:
 
treeseer

treeseer

Advocatus Pro Arbora
Joined
Jan 2, 2004
Messages
6,904
Location
se usa
"If the cut is not too big use a sharp hand saw/ pole saw Razor cut teeth"

yes it is an apple tree after all, not worth burning gas over.

Ants never hurt a tree. Pruning too much off just cuz of heartrot and ants is not good for the trees. Trees know how to live with ants; people should too!
 
Lawnmowerboy48

Lawnmowerboy48

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
184
Location
MA
If you are going for fruit production March is probably the latest that you would want to do any major pruning. I guess better later than never though.
 
Junkrunner

Junkrunner

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jan 31, 2010
Messages
241
Location
WV
:agree2: I worked/lived on orchards(south central Pa) for the biggest part of my first 24 years. We usually started pruning AFTER deer season.:) We used LP 3/8 on our trimmin saws. A clean cut will heel faster.
 
Last edited:
Top