When a Husky died some years ago, I wanted to continue using its remaining 20" chains on my ms440. It worked for bucking logs with a straight grain (forget cutting the notch and at the crotches), but the chain needed to stay really sharp to not tilt in the cut. So it was more a hasle than a...
The areas where two or many axis fight together (even if they become somewhat grafted) have a mess of tensions and compressions in play. They can easily squeeze the chain, even if nothing moves apparently. Often starting the cut on either the supposed tension or compression point gives the same...
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