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Oh dear!
Unbelievable the guys an animal. Cruelty to chain saws.
a proper scarf and back cut would have prevented that -did very similar nearly 45 years ago when logging -still remember it today -just had to stand and watch tree roll the bar at very strange angle
Yep but that was only a thinning size tree and that angle / one cut, the big stuff can do strange things agree.
That petrol beavers bars toast! Cut it up into 22lr targets.
A scarfing technique new to me?????
Ye gods! Wot wuz he smokin bro?
Ah one of those limited around the corner chainsaws. Very techanogical. Obviously wasn't counting on gravity.
I've done worse
Dropped a eucalypt about 6 tonne onto a guy's saw and completely smashed it, at least this one is just the bar
No pics sorry
The guy just said "I've got insurance for that" and we used my big saw then kept cutting the row but stopped trying to get them to drop the opposite way from what angle they were leaning on, duh
Big fuckers, we dropped about 70 tonne of wood in one day - old shelterbelt of 100 ft high trees
Hmmmm! I'll just give this wee one a quick flick in passing. Oh, bugger!
Awesome, be able to cut around corners
Tell him I have $100 for him here, just send the saw up and I'll post the cash!
Imagine Bunji's yarn he could spin about this
"Why's the Mrs doing the Team America dance up there on the ridge????"
Ohh...not looking where I ws going:o
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yes I like the bulldozer photo -I watched a work mate back a D7 over his lunch bag -he was not impressed - my incident like this resulted in severe internal damage to saw as well not just a simple bar and chain replacement -scarf what I would have done with that tree even if it is small - make a cut a third of the way into it on the side you want it to fall -then cut angle down to that and remove a neat wedge -back cut or falling cut about i inch above - over she goes on a neat hinge -keep both the scarf cut and back cut dead level -easy peasy -
As I only clipped it I think its recoverable with a new piston/barrel and flywheel, plus some plastics. But as FMG coughed up immediately...who needs three operating Husky 395's!!!
I sent this photo, plus the one with it tucked half under the track and the FMG lady replied with an " Oh dear. The money's in your account" :thumbsup:
No need to tell @flock how to drop a thinning- he cut his teeth on Husky 380's @ The Big K Woody School
Thanks Bud, we spent 2 or 3 months axe thinning, loved it, wish I had of kept the axe which took heaps of filing & files, to get thinning trees down in a handful of blows.
For those unfamiliar with the 'Team America dance' reference, here it is for your enlightenment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-g460wvyigM
Haha I know how you feel.
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Bury it mate to tie up the carbon :)
Yeah nar @flock ,got to do the axe thinning gig aswell,so know all about the countless hours with a flat bastard taking off the shoulder of the newly issued axe from stores and the blisters that went with it.All these years latter I can't for the life of me think why on earth we were trained in thinning with an axe when stores were full of racks of Husky 380,s. Treat em mean,keep em keen
maybe we should turn this into a best chainsaw fuck up - At Waikaremoana as Senior Ranger there I had a Task Force Green worker cut the handle clean of a 2100 with my precious 3120 we had a huge rimu windfall drop onto a track so muppets came back and asked if they could take the 3120- they had jammed a 2100 into the rimu - I reluctantly let them take it on the proviso that their supervisor used it -but no apparently young muppet decided he could handle the 3120 with its 5 foot bar and went around log buried 3120 into it and clean thru the 2100 handle -bloody lovely
I've found that once word gets round the traps that you're handy with a file to tickle up a saw,you soon go from Nigel No Mates to everyones mate.So ol mate drops off his saw ,reckons it's cutting like shit.Took one look and said 'theres your Problem.'Dickhead had tried to cut a cord with the chain back to front ffs!
I guess at least the chain would stay sharp :)
yup they are out there - Had a volunteer bring back a 266 after heading up Waikareiti track to clear a few windfalls - states it wont go -funny says I - I test started it before you took it- ohh says muppet motor starts but chain wont run - yup muppet had bloody chainbreak on - I had a serious discussion with Boss about muppets suitability as a volunteer and before you passed muppet onto me did you actually check his experience -I had not talked to him but simply left saw for him on bosses orders (muppet was a mate of the boss ) never saw him again
I'll lend the wife before I lend my chainsaws;)
Had a firewood working bee here a while ago. A few turned up with saws and the rest were to be labour on the hydraulic splitters. Saws all start up and begin rubbing their way through various logs. I crank up the 395 (which I had presharpened to a razors edge:cool:) and begin slicing rings up off some 1-2 foot dia logs piled up quicker than the small saws can get through some 8 inch stuff.
2 min later they quietly go and put their saws back in their vehicles and help feed the splitter:thumbsup:
ya know I had 15 huskies in my chainsaw room at Waikaremoana including a mighty 3120 -but the one saw everyone grabbed first was the little 242 -ya just could not beat light weight and 15500 rpm freespin- cut way above its size -dont think husky do that model any more pity- the old 181 was also a classic
Yeah the little saws really can punch above their weight if properly set up. It's definitely a lesson seeing a sharp chain hit some dirt in the fork of a stump and go from stringing to dust and just no cut speed.