Read an article about full chisel chain sharpening with a square, triangle or hex file.
Claim is; it stays sharper longer ?
Quote from the Madsen's article:
"We are often asked which direction the file should cut -- going "into" or "out-of" the cutter tooth. In practice, both are acceptable, but most filers file "into" the tooth. The experts at Oregon Cutting Systems agree this method cuts the cleanest edge on the cutter's chrome plating"
"If square-filing turns out to be too difficult to do for you, and you don't see yourself getting a square grinder, there is another option; file your square chain with a round file. While it won't perform quite as well as a square-ground chain, it will cut better than a poorly filed one -- and accurate round filing is much easier for most users. In addition, round files are less than half the price of square files."
Madsen's Article :
(broken link removed to http://www.madsens1.com/bnc_filing_cb.htm)
Any one use this method?
Claim is; it stays sharper longer ?
Quote from the Madsen's article:
"We are often asked which direction the file should cut -- going "into" or "out-of" the cutter tooth. In practice, both are acceptable, but most filers file "into" the tooth. The experts at Oregon Cutting Systems agree this method cuts the cleanest edge on the cutter's chrome plating"
"If square-filing turns out to be too difficult to do for you, and you don't see yourself getting a square grinder, there is another option; file your square chain with a round file. While it won't perform quite as well as a square-ground chain, it will cut better than a poorly filed one -- and accurate round filing is much easier for most users. In addition, round files are less than half the price of square files."
Madsen's Article :
(broken link removed to http://www.madsens1.com/bnc_filing_cb.htm)
Any one use this method?