Yes that is a lot.
Something is up with your chain, mill or your technique cause your scab can get much smoother than that. Gonna be a chore to plane that
Yes that is a lot.
Something is up with your chain, mill or your technique cause your scab can get much smoother than that. Gonna be a chore to plane that
I had that happen before to me when I milled a piece of deadfall, it was winter and when it finally did dry the wood was partially rotten. It had soaked up rainwater / snow melt over the years. The wood was NFG when it finally did dry. You could scrape it with your finger.
Had some cool spalting though, I plan to make a work bench out of it cause it should be thick enough
I adjust my speed a lot. Definitely not consistent chain speed. I don’t go wide open much. Usually 3/4. My chain sharpening skills are not anywhere near perfect either. Thinking about buying a grinder but don’t wanna pay 400$ when I’m not making much off these slabs yet. I’ve already spend a lot on new tools lately.
Don't be scared of holding back, I always go WOT , well about 99% of the time anyway.I adjust my speed a lot. Definitely not consistent chain speed. I don’t go wide open much. Usually 3/4.
Don't be scared of holding back, I always go WOT , well about 99% of the time anyway.
A self feeding chain and a small amount of push should then load up the saw so that it runs at a few thou RPM lower than Max RPM.
This how branded saws should be run. You won't kill or damage them as they are specifically design to run for 2000 hours at WOT before needing a new cylinder.
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