G and J Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Chain sharpening does take practice. I tickle up my chains with a file but I sharpen with a grinder bought for the purpose. Chains are quite cheap, however, and I know a builder who simply never sharpens them, he just swaps to a new one. For shrub cutting the downside of a sabre saw is that sometimes you need to hold the smaller branches otherwise they just vibrate with the blade and refuse to cut, so I find bolt cutters rather handy too. Either way, it’s a good opportunity for hours of power tool porn! 😉 1
Gone West Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 7 hours ago, saveasteading said: I assume I wasn't sharpening the CsS properly: I had a simple round file, and thought I was following the instructions, but perhaps not. I have a range of Ego electric garden tools including a small chainsaw and a polesaw. I always use Oregon chains and sharpen them with an Oregon hand file and guide. I also have a sabre saw but I use chainsaws only for tree work and the sabre saw for other jobs. https://egopowerplus.co.uk/products/chainsaws/cs1410e https://www.screwfix.com/p/oregon-4mm-5-32-round-chain-sharpening-file-guide/8566v 1
Crofter Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago 9 hours ago, saveasteading said: Good points. I will think further. I assume I wasn't sharpening the CsS properly: I had a simple round file, and thought I was following the instructions, but perhaps not. Thinking further, the hours of use for these won't be high so cheapo tools may suffice. And the tangled bushes will eventually behave better and the trusty bow saw and pruning saw will be usable again. I've been using a corded electric chainsaw for my log pile, and I *thought* I was keeping the chain sharp enough. Recently switched to a brand new chain and what a difference... knife through butter. It only cost about £8 as well. Worth every penny! 1
saveasteading Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 2 hours ago, Gone West said: Ego electric I'm not paying £220 however good it is. I might get the Einhell pruning size as I have the batteries and my tools remain faultless after 10+ years and a lot of use.
SteamyTea Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago I hate the noise that impact drivers/drills make. Is there a good drill that is non impact, or at least had the facility to turn the feature off. We use Milwaukee stuff at work, the circular saw is very good. Nor so keen on the rest of the kit, though the angle grinder was alright, if a bit on the large side. Mixing makes, if bought in a good deal is not so bad as you often get one charger and two batteries, so saves getting a second charger.
Alan Ambrose Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Me too. There’s a slightly more pricey ‘hydraulic’ one which is quiter. I’m finding that we drive most screws though with combis or drill/drivers.
Nickfromwales Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I have the 'soft impact' Makita, much quieter and doesn't screw with my Tinnitus. https://www.screwfix.com/p/makita-dts141zj-18v-li-ion-lxt-brushless-cordless-impact-driver-bare/6268P?tc=ET2&gclsrc=aw.ds&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=20155423388&gbraid=0AAAAAD8IdPwxO053YvSbCmMepG6Gskz9x&gclid=CjwKCAiAkbbMBhB2EiwANbxtbR0UzbcX7Wb8GD5fDq5UUimYWayWY13Gp7PDLLi6ogS2m9WmHNFGZxoCDTQQAvD_BwE
Nestor Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 5 hours ago, SteamyTea said: I hate the noise that impact drivers/drills make. Is there a good drill that is non impact, or at least had the facility to turn the feature off. We use Milwaukee stuff at work, the circular saw is very good. Nor so keen on the rest of the kit, though the angle grinder was alright, if a bit on the large side. Mixing makes, if bought in a good deal is not so bad as you often get one charger and two batteries, so saves getting a second charger. I had the MAKITA DTS141ZJ, silly money but was a pleasure to use whilst building a house, very quiet. It did develop a fault after 6 years heavy use. Now using a Milwaukee M18 FQID, more torque, cheaper but not as quiet as the Makita.
saveasteading Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 5 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Is there a good drill that is non impact, or at least had the facility to turn the feature off. I thought this was widely available. My battery drill has a setting on the torque setting ring, that switches into hammer mode. and a switch for 2 speeds. And lots of machines are rotation only and no hammer option. My very best drill, and without impact option, is a 25 year old Bosch. It is ultra smooth and effortlessly powerful, and with trigger speed control. I think the absence of features allows the motor and gearing to be dedicated to the one process.
SteamyTea Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago My understanding of impact drills are really jerk drills. They have a spring, ratchet and rotating mass that is released every rotation. That mass caused a jerk force increases the torque on the drive shaft. Stopping torque is a third power of mass, rather than the second power of speed.
Oz07 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) Look into the oil ones i think they are quieter for working in sensitive locations. I used to hate the racket the impacts made too but really are effective Edited 2 hours ago by Oz07
saveasteading Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) 18 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: released every rotation It's just a primitive undulating washer sort of thing that retracts the bit then releases it. So it is still mainly scraping the surface. I wish I had learnt of SDS drills much sooner. I had thought they were only for concrete breakers. Edited 2 hours ago by saveasteading
carlos21 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 16 minutes ago, Oz07 said: Look into the oil ones i think they are quieter for working in sensitive locations. I used to hate the racket the impacts made too but really are effective same here, not keen on the noise, but when i occasionally use my drill for screws to keep the noise i really notice the extra weight... they might be noisy but bloody good at putting in screws, i just wear ear defenders as often using saws etc anyway.
carlos21 Posted 5 minutes ago Posted 5 minutes ago On 11/02/2026 at 14:49, Nestor said: About to give this ago, DUC150Z for 50 metres of Devon bank medium hedge pruning / cutting back. Will let you know my thoughts in a few days Silky saw, no batteries required. for garden prunning those silky saws are brilliant, lovely smooth cut and super sharp, probably faster cutting than a cheap n nasty badly sharpened chainsaw.
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