Scrounging Firewood (and other stuff)

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About the handling … I guess it is kinda like felt vibrations … just move your left hand about 1/2" to the right ...

I know, I know, all about inboard and outboard clutches … and I really thought I was missing something … till I read a story about one of Husky's top guys in that evergreen limbing competition … and he choose to use one of their saws with an inboard clutch!!!

IMO, it is all about personal preference!
 
The 262 is pushing one saw out of the stable, and the choices to sell were 346 and 241

Bingo. Actually, originally I was planning to sell the 361, but man I just love that dang saw. LOL. I then thought about selling the 346xp, then the guy on FB posted about wanting a 241 and I figured I could get more $ out of it. I have about $600 in mine, with the extra chains I bought. I don't think I could sell it for $475. Although, that's probably a fair price for both parties.

I'm torn. I don't have to sell any saws, but I told the wife I would. I used gun money for the 262, which was supposed to go towards a rifle I have on layaway with a buddy. I have a thing for WW2 weapons ;)

I appreciate everyones feedback.
 
Selling good saws (of either brand) that are NLA often turns out to be a mistake! Ditto guns.

I once traded several used guns to get a new one I wanted … and I have regretting getting rid of one of the used ones ever since, and my infatuation with the new gun/caliber was short lived! My Ruger American Rifle in 30-06 has replaced it as my primary hunting rifle.
 
Speaking of the 262. I took several of the saws to my work bench (tailgate, LOL), and cleaned them up, touched up the chains, pulled the plugs, checked cylinders/pistons, etc.

The 262 is amazingly clean, but it was pretty dirty. Cleaned her all up, but then found this:
A049B9EA-0BF4-4B51-A7E5-5DE3767D98AF.jpeg

Is that normal? If not, is it rings? She had plenty if compression, dealer said 140+. The rest of the piston looks perfect, and the cylinder from the plug hole looks perfect as well.

2E664FB9-1911-42AE-A994-0DE35F8BDC9E.jpeg

Also, this a KS marking?
62184196-3A96-4E40-8F9B-7EEF10089E35.jpeg

Lastly, here are a few of her after being cleaned up with some WD40.

C6C189CD-D780-4C6D-A993-53E6C35A97F4.jpeg
1BABD7FC-75CB-48F6-B78D-04D1F0FC6E62.jpeg
515EC78A-3B63-4932-B684-12ED6D9C50A4.jpeg
063AB5E3-8A20-4A07-BAEB-392C8DCB81B3.jpeg
75E96B20-775E-4799-AFEE-F8B850E59699.jpeg

Pulled the plug, and she was running rich. Leaned her out some, and she seems to be running well. Need more time in wood with her.

All of these beauties got cleaned up today.

4850BA05-0926-4E0B-A2BD-AFCBD30355CC.jpeg
 
Selling good saws (of either brand) that are NLA often turns out to be a mistake! Ditto guns.

I once traded several used guns to get a new one I wanted … and I have regretting getting rid of one of the used ones ever since, and my infatuation with the new gun/caliber was short lived! My Ruger American Rifle in 30-06 has replaced it as my primary hunting rifle.

Wise words for sure.

I went through a phase with Glock pistols, I must have had eight or nine of them at one time.Thankfully I got over that phase. 1911s FTW! LOL. Glocks are great, I just shoot 1911s, CZ, and others with JMB's grip angle better.
 
That is the KS marking, and I really like their stuff. My 10 mm 044 has original KS P+C.

I would not be concerned with that discoloration, it is likely from being a little too rich (which you noted) or using an inferior 2 stroke oil. It should not cause you any problems.

Awesome man. Thanks, I was concerned for a minute as I've never seen that before.

ETA: Speaking of oil, a while back I picked up some of the Husqvarna synthetic stuff in the silver jug. Previously, I always ran Stihl High Performance (orange jug).
 
I was driving on a private road when I spotted them. I stopped. There were 4 ash rounds just off to the side. Checked to see that the coast was clear. I quickly loaded them in the back of the Jeep and drove directly home. OK, so I'm making it sound more nefarious than it was... it was my road and the rounds were the forks that my neighbor said I could have after helping him split and haul the straight pieces up to his porch last night. He was just starting when I drove past yesterday so I asked if he wanted help and he said sure in a neighborly kind of way that meant he didn't need help but would enjoy the company anyway. Honestly about the toughest splitting ash I can recall. Threw a couple of locust chunks on to to finish the load.
View attachment 860925
Did the rest of the locust the other night.
View attachment 860926
And a few pine rounds for shoulder season before that.
View attachment 860927
And swept off the FIL's trailer to return on Sunday. That tiny thing at the top of the pic is a wheelbarrow full of chips.
View attachment 860928

I love the way black locust splits! The torsional rigidity of that stuff is amazing as well. When I was splitting the 5 cubes of locust I picked up last year, a wafer thin slice split off in addition to the two halves. It was prolly 14 inches long and four inches wide but very thin and it was virtually untwistable.

I'm torn. I don't have to sell any saws, but I told the wife I would.

You won't make that mistake again. Rookie error :laugh:
 
Wise words for sure.

I went through a phase with Glock pistols, I must have had eight or nine of them at one time.Thankfully I got over that phase. 1911s FTW! LOL. Glocks are great, I just shoot 1911s, CZ, and others with JMB's grip angle better.
I love the feel of Glock but the one I have now that’s horribly inaccurate and has fixed sights.
 
Mike is right about the buildup. Ran rich with low quality oil.

I’ve heard Stihl oil causes buildup. I normally run Husky grey bottle or Maxims K2. I know the Husky oil is good stuff because my nephew works at the facility that tests oil for Husqvarna.
I bought a gallon of the Husky stuff, was pricey. But, that should last me a while.

Thanks for the feedback, was freaking out at first.
 
My nephew is a smart, technical guy. More of a car guy but he’s learned a lot about two strokes doing this job.

FWIW they use 372’s as their test engine. I believe they run 5 of them simultaneously for each blend of oil and sometimes run them hours to days at a time.

Every new blend of oil gets tested extensively at their facility before it goes out to the public.
 
Happy Birthday Jeff!

FYI, I am NOT a fan of Stihl 2 cycle oil. I use AMSOIL Saber (I buy it by the gallon) at 40:1 in all my 2 stroke stuff, and almost all my saws are ported, some are ported Asian Clones, and I have never lost a saw.

Two of my ported Asian clones failed (in someone else's hands) running Stihl oil at 50:1. I insisted he change to Saber at 40:1 and he has beat the crap out of the replacement Asian clone and it is still running just fine. I think ALL of the saw porters I know insist their saws be run on high quality oil in a ratio of at least 40:1. High performance creates more stress.

I also do a good amount of milling (often with Asian clones) and that is very stressful on saws.
 
As far as safety chain goes, Vanguard is the best cutting of the group. Adjusting the rakers by hand isn’t fun though.
You just have to know how to bend them properly:laughing:.
I’m torn between Stihl RS and Oregon LGX as my favorite chain. I also have Oregon EXL but haven’t cut enough with that yet. Haven’t had the chance to try the Husky X-cut.

Stihl cuts well holds an edge longer than anything else. But it’s a bear to hand file, especially if you rock it.

LGX sharpens nicely with a file and lasts decently long. Maybe a bit faster cutting when really really sharp.
I like the EXL a lot, it's pretty hard compared to the LGX, as is the new husky x chain.
They also stretch a lot less which is nice.
I feel for all you guys. I must have the best Stihl dealer in the country. Discounts on new saws and buy 2 get one free on chains all year long.
I can get by one get one half off so the same deal basically, but that shop is about 30 min away and I rarely go that direction.
I can get the same deal on Oregon chain going into town.
Am no expert, but what scares me away from using grinders is heat. I used to take my chains to the other local stihl dealer (not my favorite one I always post about), and when I'd get them back, they would dull really fast in dry, dead ash. I wasn't hitting the dirt or anything either. I showed one of their freshly sharpened chains to my buddy, a millwright, and he saw the issue right away. The cutters had a blueish discoloration to them, which he said was fault of whomever was grinding on them, letting them get hot which changed the temper. He turned me onto hand filing freehand. Haven't had a chain sharpened by anyone since, save one I rocked pretty good and was too much for my limited filling skills to fix.
Heat is bad, but hard to avoid, as was said it takes practice. A nice CBN wheel will make a huge difference. Yes they are around $110, but that's a lot less than porting and it will make a stock saw cut a lot better than a ported one with a dull chain :).
For heavily rocked chains or "case hardened" ones, use a flat file to file the cutter back beyond the damage/hardness and then use a round file. That will save you lots of time and files.
Another issue I've seen is case hardened depth gauges when they are done on a grinder, just as with cutters rakers should be ground in small increments so a few rotations around the whole chain rather than taking them down all at once.
Those are very good and some great deals can be had on them.
I like to use the cheap ones for grinding drive links that have been damaged by throwing a chain, they work great for that, otherwise they are junk.
Here's there whole setup, it will get someone on the right track for finding a deal, but I'm not sure if this is a good price as it's been a while since I saved it.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Chainsaw-S...e=STRK:MEBIDX:IT&_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l2649
 
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