12 –
English
GENERAL SAFETY PRECAUTIONS
Sharpening your chain and adjusting
depth gauge setting
General information on sharpening cutting teeth
•
Never use a blunt chain. When the chain is blunt you have
to exert more pressure to force the bar through the wood
and the chips will be very small. If the chain is very blunt
it will produce wood powder and no chips or shavings.
•
A sharp chain eats its way through the wood and
produces long, thick chips or shavings.
•
The cutting part of the chain is called the cutter and
consists of a cutting tooth (A) and the depth gauge (B).
The cutters cutting depth is determined by the difference
in height between the two (depth gauge setting).
When you sharpen a cutting tooth there are four important
factors to remember.
1
Filing angle
2
Cutting angle
3
File position
4
Round
fi
le diameter
It is very dif
fi
cult to sharpen a chain correctly without the right
equipment. We recommend that you use our
fi
le gauge. This
will help you obtain the maximum kickback reduction and
cutting performance from your chain.
See instructions under the heading Technical data for
information about sharpening your chain.
Sharpening cutting teeth
To sharpen cutting teeth you will need a round
fi
le and a
fi
le
gauge. See instructions under the heading Technical data for
information on the size of
fi
le and gauge that are
recommended for the chain
fi
tted to your chain saw.
•
Check that the chain is correctly tensioned. A slack chain
will move sideways, making it more dif
fi
cult to sharpen
correctly.
•
Always
fi
le cutting teeth from the inside face. Reduce the
pressure on the return stroke. File all the teeth on one side
fi
rst, then turn the chain saw and
fi
le the teeth on the other
side.
•
File all the teeth to the same length. When the length of
the cutting teeth is reduced to 4 mm (0.16") the chain is
worn out and should be replaced.
!
WARNING! Departure from the sharpening
instructions considerably increases the risk
of kickback.