This is one of the things I don't do in my shop I have to find out how your price these Matt when you sharpen them and how long does it take. Also do you have to do a good cleaning first?
We can certainly talk this out, Paul. I'm not too hot on sharpening chain these days, but maybe you can help me brainstorm some ways to find joy in the market.
But, as the diameter of the abrasive wheel wears, the left cutters will be less tilt and the outer more? No. Perhaps a CBN type wheel would abate such variation. The Super Jolly has an adjustment to compensate for diameter wear, but as that is adjusted the degree markers for tilt get out of index, same reason.. My solution was to forget the tilt, set the adjustment for centering the wheel as needed, and I also switched to CBN wheels.
I have searched and searched for this information and just gave up. THANK YOU!!!
You're welcome!!
This explains perfectly
This is one of the things I don't do in my shop I have to find out how your price these Matt when you sharpen them and how long does it take. Also do you have to do a good cleaning first?
We can certainly talk this out, Paul. I'm not too hot on sharpening chain these days, but maybe you can help me brainstorm some ways to find joy in the market.
There actually is a simple way to say to it up. Just keep a length of brand new chain around. And use it to set the tilt angle perfectly.
Does wheel reverse directions for each side?
But, as the diameter of the abrasive wheel wears, the left cutters will be less tilt and the outer more? No. Perhaps a CBN type wheel would abate such variation. The Super Jolly has an adjustment to compensate for diameter wear, but as that is adjusted the degree markers for tilt get out of index, same reason.. My solution was to forget the tilt, set the adjustment for centering the wheel as needed, and I also switched to CBN wheels.
I don't have a tilt angle on my chainsaw sharpener