Originally Posted by
nutpie
That does not wreak the chain?
I'd Imagine if you did that a lot it would wear it out a lot faster than cutting wood, but as long as you don't cut the steel your good. Now when I did this before I hit the steel on one of the big roof top units and that wore down my depth gauges a lot. but once I sharpened the cutters It still cut through wood. It definitely wears down the cutters. I barely made it through that wood without sharpening but it still made it through. now its sharp so its tearing through trees like crazy now. I would also worry about the bar getting dinged up as well if that's your only bar. I know how to sharpen and fix the bar myself so its not a big deal. but if that's your only bar and chain set, and you don't know how to sharpen it, I would not recommend doing this with the chainsaw if you depend on the saw for wood.
I normally use a sawzall for the ones this small as the chainsaw is kinda dangerous. the only reason I even tried this in the first place is when I was in Ft. Hood the difference in price between clean and dirty fins was like over $1 a pound more at the time. The only metal saw I had was a home depot hack saw as I didn't have a sawzall. I was at the yard with the coils and they said the price difference. I was like hold on I'm gonna clean them. broke out the chainsaw and gave it a shot and sure enough I made $300 on them fins. more than enough to cover a new bar and chain had I needed one and still put money in my pocket. If any ones gonna do this I highly recommend learning how to use the saw on wood first as it kicks way easier in metal.
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