I leave my oil in the house and the saws on the floor of my sauna so they stay above freezing. But if I was leaving stuff sit outside I’d probably say 20’s is where I’d draw the line with summer weight oil.
+2Other than being thick when I fill I never worried about it. A couple of minutes after runnin the saw the oil in the tank should be warm enough from the engine. Unless you cutting in Sub 0 temps.
Up here, who doesn’t?!Wait....u have a sauna?
Super dry wood is going to throw more dust and cause the bar to be drier than if you were cutting green wood. If you are cutting a lot of dry standing dead I would crank open the oiler screw if you have an adjustable oiler.One dumb, tangential question while I’m at it.
Are some woods more prone to soaking up the oil (the chips and dust on the bar grove) than others?
I was not at all satisfied yesterday with the oil on my chain whilst cutting some standing dead ash. And that was my suspicion.
There are getting to be a lot of mobile saunas. In addition there are people trying to monetize that subset of sauna users. I am in a sauna group and they had to ban a couple of the investors to a mobile sauna company because they would barf product on every single post.Some poor city slob who burns fuel oil or natural gas.
They did a news story last evening about a mobile suna I believe the winter carnival is going ont in St Paul.
Al
Super dry wood is going to throw more dust and cause the bar to be drier than if you were cutting green wood. If you are cutting a lot of dry standing dead I would crank open the oiler screw if you have an adjustable oiler.
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