I think the Stihl stays sharper longer and the Oregon is easier to sharpen.
I'm just a firewood cutter. I've bought a lot of my chain from Baileys (Woodland Pro) so I don't really know the brand. There are a couple of local saw shops. I don't know for sure what brands they sell but they both sell to a lot of pro loggers. I'm sure whatever they sell must be okay.
As it sits now I have more chain loops than I will ever use and a couple of reels just in case.
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Used to be. Now, some are Carlton, some are Tri-link.As far as I know they are Carlton.
New loop of TriLink 0.325" with factory grind
All the ones I have in my garage say Carlton on the tie straps, they came in Woodland Pro boxes. Regardless of brand I have been happy with all the chains I have used. They all cut the same after a couple filings for me.Used to be. Now, some are Carlton, some are Tri-link.
Philbert
It's a cost benefit thing - I buy Stihl files because they are cheap and good and I can get them at the local ACE. I use them on other chains, and it only takes a couple of swipes to keep them sharp. The only Stihl chains they have there that fit my saws are some 62DL 0.050" gauge lo pro with horrid looking safety thingys, and I'm sure not paying extra for those.
"What chain brand YOU buy when u need one now"
STIHL does not sell .325 narrow kerf chain. STIHL's PS3 chain is the only full chisel 3/8 low profile chain available. PowerSharp is unique to Oregon. Some ECHO saws have odd driver link counts (e.g 57DL instead of 56DL), so you have to find an ECHO dealer if buying on short notice.
In my part of the world Red Mountain do a full chisel no lumps by the rakers 3/8 x 1.3 Lo Pro chain. I don't know who manufactures it, as Iv'e never got around to using it, as I was given approx 45 ft of PS in odd lengths so that"s still being used/made up into loops 50 & 55 Dl's for the small Oleo Mac 244F I use for sawing my split fire wood They also do a selection of bars & their top of the range is a rebadged Sugi non laminated " Jobbie" but the web page you used to get was the "pits"& the main dealer guy in my part of France is a waste of space so I gave up before I ever got to the ordering stage
Philbert
The only loop of VXL I have was very smooth when new, but it is 68DL so it might not behave the same on a lighter, shorter bar. The last time I filed it I dropped the depth gauges just a little too far and now it chatters rather a lot. Still cuts very well though.Have Blount/Oregon solved their out of the box "chatter/vibration" on 91VXL I had quite a few problems (the rep knew about it )some time back, but as I was given some PS chain ( see post#49 ) iv"e not used any VXL for some months & wondered if they had found a cure.
i'm not convinced that sithl chains are better than oregon/carlton. i've seen no hard data to support these clains and i haven't observed it "in the wild." some guys think that if it has a stihl trade mark it was sent from heaven but to me stihl chains aren't significantly different except they tend to have more anti-kickback features, are a little heavier (i think they are all built as .063 with the ends of the drive lins reduce in thickness for .058 and .050)
Bling beats flingI do not think that hardness is the only concern with chain. Its a factor, but I do firmly believe that good fling matters more then anything else. Choosing the right chain for the situation matters more (chisel vs semi chisel).
What does that mean?Bling beats fling
Well, I actually had no idea what you meant by fling in your post, so I turned into joke. But in fact to many showing off the name on the side, be it on saws or chains or anything else, is more important that function vs. cost (value).What does that mean?
I mean filing. I can spul rul gud.Well, I actually had no idea what you meant by fling in your post, so I turned into joke. But in fact to many showing off the name on the side, be it on saws or chains or anything else, is more important that function vs. cost (value).
Lol, filing. That shoulda been obvious! I'm home sick with a sore throat so I'll blame it on that.I mean filing. I can spul rul gud.
Take a few of each to a local machinist, or machine shop and have them do a hardness test.
I do not think that hardness is the only concern with chain. Its a factor, . . .