Ruined a good chain yesterday

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Old Goat

Old Goat

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Sep 16, 2007
Messages
323
Location
Utah
I had just started cutting some Siberian elm logs yesterday with a nearly new, freshly sharpened chain. I was about 2/3 of the way through the log and sparks started to fly. By the time I realized what was going on the chain was toast.

I installed a new chain and finished cutting up the rest of the logs before I came back to the first one. I made a final cut about 5" away from the first cut. I wanted to be able to get that piece on the splitter without damaging another chain. I had my mental Fingers crossed the whole time.

The splitter revealed half of a brick embedded in the center of the log. When this tree was much younger someone must have placed the brick in a crotch of a much smaller tree. The tree grew up around the brick without even a hint on the outside that it was in the center.

All of this wood comes from the town green dump. I have found Nails, fence post, chain link fence, even tow chains in the wood I have scrounged there, but this is the first brick.

I figure that I can salvage the saw chain but I am going to lose over half of its usefulness just getting it sharp again.IMG_20171209_111900.jpg IMG_20171209_111916.jpg IMG_20171209_111935.jpg IMG_20171209_112403.jpg
 
Jakers

Jakers

Owner - Arbor Jake's Tree Service, LLC
Joined
Jan 5, 2012
Messages
2,340
Location
Fergus Falls, MN
I was given a chain that was run against brick or cement and looked like that. You just need to do exactly like you said, slowly eat away until your top edge is true again without overheating the cutter.
F-that... I'd chuck it and spin up a new loop. I've rocked many chains on some pretty nasty stuff. the only time I've ever seen one come out that bad is when i let the "new guy" run the saw and he was trenching in the dirt (gravel driveway) with every cut. i guess theres only one way to learn that sound when cutting. i just got lucky and recognized it early in life i guess
 
ChoppyChoppy

ChoppyChoppy

Tree Freak
Joined
Jun 17, 2013
Messages
10,617
Location
AK
2-3 passes on the grinder and it'll be cutting again. Doesn't need to be textbook perfect.

Worst I've gotten into was a couple logs that got sprayed with the crap from drilling a well. The logs were decked too close. Would figure it was just mud which doesn't bother the chain much, but that stuff was like concrete. I ended up throwing the worst of it in the the burn pit, wasn't worth trying to cut it. In one log I had to pull off the chain 3 or 4 times to sharpen it.... I normally can go 10-12 cords on a sharpening!

Got some logs from a property that had apparently a tree stand on every other tree. They used about a dozen nails for each wood rung, spaced about 12-18" apart. The rungs rotted off, tree grew and nails got covered.

I've got almost 1400hrs on my processor and I've only gone through 5 chains and 1 bar. The old bar is still ok, just the rails are down to where the drivers bottom out.
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
29,497
Location
MN
F-that... I'd chuck it and spin up a new loop. I've rocked many chains on some pretty nasty stuff. the only time I've ever seen one come out that bad is when i let the "new guy" run the saw and he was trenching in the dirt (gravel driveway) with every cut. i guess theres only one way to learn that sound when cutting. i just got lucky and recognized it early in life i guess
If it was a safety chain yeah I would toss it. But it's a chisel chain and will still have a few sharpens left after he fixes it.
 
Little Al

Little Al

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
3,159
Location
Midi pyrenees FRANCE
I had just started cutting some Siberian elm logs yesterday with a nearly new, freshly sharpened chain. I was about 2/3 of the way through the log and sparks started to fly. By the time I realized what was going on the chain was toast.

I installed a new chain and finished cutting up the rest of the logs before I came back to the first one. I made a final cut about 5" away from the first cut. I wanted to be able to get that piece on the splitter without damaging another chain. I had my mental Fingers crossed the whole time.

The splitter revealed half of a brick embedded in the center of the log. When this tree was much younger someone must have placed the brick in a crotch of a much smaller tree. The tree grew up around the brick without even a hint on the outside that it was in the center.

All of this wood comes from the town green dump. I have found Nails, fence post, chain link fence, even tow chains in the wood I have scrounged there, but this is the first brick.

I figure that I can salvage the saw chain but I am going to lose over half of its usefulness just getting it sharp again.View attachment 617967 View attachment 617968 View attachment 617969 View attachment 617970

When you've filed out all the bad bits that chain will cut like a hooligan :blob2:
 
olyman
Joined
Jul 29, 2006
Messages
26,895
Location
iowa
pile of wood I got two years ago,,guy said there was a brick or something low in the log...how about three cement bricks,,glued together with port land,,to fill center of tree???? I could see it,,so I just sawed all around it,,and split the edges away till I freed it!!!! he screwed his chain up bigtime...he told me so I wouldn't!!!!
 
Bobby Kirbos

Bobby Kirbos

Scrounger of Cellulose Based BTUs
Joined
Sep 6, 2017
Messages
2,499
Location
Echo, PA - just outside of Poulan
pile of wood I got two years ago,,guy said there was a brick or something low in the log...how about three cement bricks,,glued together with port land,,to fill center of tree???? I could see it,,so I just sawed all around it,,and split the edges away till I freed it!!!! he screwed his chain up bigtime...he told me so I wouldn't!!!!

Nice guy.

Is that tree cutter equivalent of the ex-boyfriend giving you fair warning that the chick is bat s**t crazy BEFORE you stick your d**k in her?
 
crowbuster
Joined
Dec 31, 2007
Messages
763
Location
Indiana
I feel for ya, But not that bad. I put a brand new chain on my 046 with the 32in bar on to cut a big ole ash base in a farmers yard. Half way through the first cut, BAM BAM BAM. No cut no more. Pull er out, half the teeth gone, as in no longer on the chain. Found a big field stone that was put in the crotch and grown over. So much for free wood. haha. The things we find.
 
Iaff113

Iaff113

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jul 31, 2015
Messages
336
Location
Frederick
Just the other week I took a job of cutting down five 30 foot Leyland Cypress what a crap job that was. To make it better ruined a brand new chain to metal fence post they used to hold the trees up how ever many moons ago. Had to cut the rest of them and leave a 4 foot stump


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Jakers

Jakers

Owner - Arbor Jake's Tree Service, LLC
Joined
Jan 5, 2012
Messages
2,340
Location
Fergus Falls, MN
Just the other week I took a job of cutting down five 30 foot Leyland Cypress what a crap job that was. To make it better ruined a brand new chain to metal fence post they used to hold the trees up how ever many moons ago. Had to cut the rest of them and leave a 4 foot stump


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Found many a t-post used for the same reason. Some trees are really good at eating objects and not showing any external signs
 
Top