CUTTING IN COLD WEATHER
The Oregon Technical Services Department offers a free safety seminar program to our customers in the
United States. If your organization uses chainsaws, and if safety
for your people is a high priority, look into our Service School Program.
Cutting in cold conditions, in snow, and in frozen
wood can cause rapid wear and possible breakage of saw chain. Follow
the steps below to keep cold-weather wear to a minimum.
- OIL - Use a lighter weight of bar-chain oil, or dilute
bar-chain oil 25 percent with clean kerosene or diesel oil. Use
twice as much of this diluted oil during operation, and be certain
your chain is receiving oil from the saw.
- TENSION - Keep your chain correctly tensioned. Check and
adjust often.
- CUTTERS - Keep cutters sharp. Touch up every hour, more
often if needed. Do not force dull chain to cut!
- DEPTH GAUGES - The bite of cutters is regulated by the
height of the leading portion of each cutter, commonly known as
the depth gauge. Check and adjust your cutter's depth gauges at
every sharpening.
- BAR - Keep the bar groove clean and oil holes open. Turn
symmetrical bars over to equalize rail wear.
- DRIVE SPROCKET - Replace the sprocket after every two
chains, or sooner if wear is evident. Be absolutely sure to thoroughly
read the operator's manual supplied with your chainsaw.
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