I have a McCulloch Timber Bear.
I "believe" it to be a 20" bar, but I'm not 100%. I measure the cutting length and get 19 and a bit more inches depending on where exactly the tape measure starts/stops. See Photos!
I have three chains for it, an Oregon 72, and Oregon 76 and one marked 370, which I believe is the original McCulloch PM370G chain mentioned in the manual. (3/8" pitch, .050 chain gauge)
The manual mentions a 7/32 file for the PMG370G, I want to buy some files to sharpen the chains myself (I have an Oregon sharpener deallie that clamps on the bar. I used it ages ago and it worked good. There is no file with it currently so I'm not sure what size to get.
Also, is this a 20" bar? Can that be determined from the chains? Also, what are the different numbers? I thought it was drive teeth but if that was the case, shouldn't they all be the same.
And finally, how do I determine if they are safety chains? I imagine they are.
Thanks



P.S. I know it's not a high end saw but it hasn't failed me in a lot of cutting of black oak, ponderosa pine, incense-cedar and douglas-fir over the years. And it was my dad's saw initially, he gave me this 55cc beast.
I "believe" it to be a 20" bar, but I'm not 100%. I measure the cutting length and get 19 and a bit more inches depending on where exactly the tape measure starts/stops. See Photos!
I have three chains for it, an Oregon 72, and Oregon 76 and one marked 370, which I believe is the original McCulloch PM370G chain mentioned in the manual. (3/8" pitch, .050 chain gauge)
The manual mentions a 7/32 file for the PMG370G, I want to buy some files to sharpen the chains myself (I have an Oregon sharpener deallie that clamps on the bar. I used it ages ago and it worked good. There is no file with it currently so I'm not sure what size to get.
Also, is this a 20" bar? Can that be determined from the chains? Also, what are the different numbers? I thought it was drive teeth but if that was the case, shouldn't they all be the same.
And finally, how do I determine if they are safety chains? I imagine they are.
Thanks




P.S. I know it's not a high end saw but it hasn't failed me in a lot of cutting of black oak, ponderosa pine, incense-cedar and douglas-fir over the years. And it was my dad's saw initially, he gave me this 55cc beast.