What's your favorite chainsaw file ....Nothing quite like a brand new chainsaw file for sharpening

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

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

U&A

The Millstead LLC
Joined
Jan 17, 2016
Messages
3,681
Location
Michigan
The problem with saw/chain branded files is they are usually supplied on tender /contract so different company' s could have made them so quality could vary A few years back Oregon were quality but then seemed to go downhill

Just like OEM branded oil filters, air filters and oil.

Chevy
Ford
Mopar
Stihl
Husky

Everything



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
crammit442

crammit442

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined
Oct 6, 2016
Messages
46
Location
Alabama
Canyon Angler

Canyon Angler

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Aug 18, 2006
Messages
1,776
Location
Far East Virginia
I think I saw somebody said all files are basically the same... well then clearly you haven't used the Chinese file from Walmart or Home Depot because they suck and dull quite quickly

I've bought Chinese files (not chainsaw files) from Harbor Freight that were very good, much harder than the Mexican garbage Nicholson has been palming off on us...

Making a decent file isn't rocket surgery ... it's more like 17th century blacksmithing technology...
 
user 122190
Joined
Apr 28, 2014
Messages
7,785
Yup! Kinda hard to make big improvements on a several century old round metal rod. Some days my file is the greatest file in the entire history of files, and the next day it feels dull, and the next day it is again amazing. Get the chain clean, and let the metal act on the metal. A film of oil or dirt and the file does not make good contact and will feel dull.

When I am out in the wilderness and have no choice but to file away, go 1 or two strokes per cutter, wiping the file across the back of your glove every stroke. After doing each cutter this way, then begin filing and making an actual difference.

I've bought Chinese files (not chainsaw files) from Harbor Freight that were very good, much harder than the Mexican garbage Nicholson has been palming off on us...

Making a decent file isn't rocket surgery ... it's more like 17th century blacksmithing technology...
 
August76

August76

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Jul 25, 2018
Messages
860
Location
Arizona
Yup! Kinda hard to make big improvements on a several century old round metal rod. Some days my file is the greatest file in the entire history of files, and the next day it feels dull, and the next day it is again amazing. Get the chain clean, and let the metal act on the metal. A film of oil or dirt and the file does not make good contact and will feel dull.

When I am out in the wilderness and have no choice but to file away, go 1 or two strokes per cutter, wiping the file across the back of your glove every stroke. After doing each cutter this way, then begin filing and making an actual difference.
It helps
 

NCPT

Love my saws
Joined
Jan 31, 2018
Messages
522
Location
NC
Yup! Kinda hard to make big improvements on a several century old round metal rod. Some days my file is the greatest file in the entire history of files, and the next day it feels dull, and the next day it is again amazing. Get the chain clean, and let the metal act on the metal. A film of oil or dirt and the file does not make good contact and will feel dull.

When I am out in the wilderness and have no choice but to file away, go 1 or two strokes per cutter, wiping the file across the back of your glove every stroke. After doing each cutter this way, then begin filing and making an actual difference.
It's not so much about improving the design of a file, it's the type of steel used for the file.
 

Latest posts

Top