cus_deluxe
Commie Satan turd
i wouldnt wanna mill with anything less than 90ccs. outboard clutch and an oiler that puts out enough oil is key
i wouldnt wanna mill with anything less than 90ccs. outboard clutch and an oiler that puts out enough oil is key
yeah. i havent done a ton of milling, but heat is the enemy and milling is just hard on the saw. lots of oil is good, and in theory an outboard clutch keeps heat away from bearing/sealWhy outboard clutch? Heat issues? Just trying to learn.
Lol have fun carrying that around!Interesting cus.
Im going to be new to milling. My dream milling setup is two husky 2100’s in the ak saw mill setup. With a adjustable extra oil tank if needed. I’m going to have very large diameter trees to take down soon. I hate to waste lumber quality trees into firewood. Probably talking a 50” to 69”+ mill. I do have husky 570’s with outboard clutches I believe. For a single power head mill I have a 100 cc r40 partner.
Definitely go 90cc+. Otherwise you'll be very disappointed
my 661 does fairly well. I haven't experienced and trouble with power or had any mechanical failure to date.
I mostly mill stuff too large for a portable band-sawmill, and stuff that's too good for firewood.. . Also keep my chains very sharp... #1 cause of cumulative overheating & saw failure I have witnesses has been a dull chain & heavy feed pressure-> all cuts are made longer and harder by dull chains.
My 394 spends most of is time on the mill & does well.
Better oiler output on the 394 than 661, even after putting an HO version oiler on the 661.
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