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Thanks how about the differences in bars and sprocket though

 

Bars . Long, short, in between . Basically if you put a bar that is too long for the size of the engine it will struggle . If you put a bar on that is way short of what the engine can handle you can take advantage of this and put a slightly bigger sprocket on which will raise the gearing giving you a faster chain speed . . A good rule of thumb is max bar length in inches = to one third of engine capacity . I.E. 60cc engine max 20" bar :001_smile:

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Bars . Long, short, in between . Basically if you put a bar that is too long for the size of the engine it will struggle . If you put a bar on that is way short of what the engine can handle you can take advantage of this and put a slightly bigger sprocket on which will raise the gearing giving you a faster chain speed . . A good rule of thumb is max bar length in inches = to one third of engine capacity . I.E. 60cc engine max 20" bar :001_smile:

 

Thanks and why are some bars less power sapping than others of the same length

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Thanks and why are some bars less power sapping than others of the same length

 

Thats all about kerf - thats how wide a chunk that bars take out of the wood - a narrow kerf bar and chain takes a narrower channel out so takes less power - it is however less forgiving on heavy logging and felling work.

 

You can also get in to half skip and full skip chain where instead of having a full compliment of cutters on your chain, every other one or one in three is missing causing less drag and sapping less power - one way to get a lesser saw to pull a big bar. Not so common in the UK though!

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Thats all about kerf - thats how wide a chunk that bars take out of the wood - a narrow kerf bar and chain takes a narrower channel out so takes less power - it is however less forgiving on heavy logging and felling work.

 

You can also get in to half skip and full skip chain where instead of having a full compliment of cutters on your chain, every other one or one in three is missing causing less drag and sapping less power - one way to get a lesser saw to pull a big bar. Not so common in the UK though!

 

Thanks

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