Honestly. You will be disappointed ... I bought a couple for use at the cottage. Most of the trees I was dropping landed in silt , sand, Mudd. All dirty wood by the time I got around to bucking them.
I always keep a sharp chain, a quick file in the field after every tank and keep going.
When I got the carbide China’s (not only were they expensive) I also had to get a diamond bit to Sharpen then. This takes the field sharpen out the question unless you have a dremall and you can use the battery on your quad (which is what I did). The carbide chains do take abuse, but they cult allot slower, heat up faster and in the big picture don’t save much time.
I would recommend you have more chains with you, rotate them when your in the dirty stuff , pay allot more attention to what your cutting. The price and hassle is not worth it in my opinion unless your running a bunch of them , have them onsite which will have allot of upfront. Cost.
I’ll see if I can find my old pics. Hope this helps and you don’t have to find out the way I did. I’ll only really use them if I am cutting wood that had embedded sand and crud in it even after I do my best to clean it. Then it’s off to the bench to sharpen them.