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084 kickback?

Started by stump farmer, December 01, 2010, 11:45:17 AM

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stump farmer

Newbie here with a question maybe some of you large saw operators might have some insight on. Had an experienced co-worker get a violent kickback with an 084, 42" bar running 404 (don't have info on what type)chain. He was flushing a stump and the saw kicked back into his knee (no injury due to chaps and a knee brace) hard enough to break the knee brace. Said it was like a rifle shot when it popped and came out of the kerf. I realize there are many factors to a kickback. What I'm wondering is, given the age of this saw design, has anyone experienced or heard that these saws are more prone to kickback than say a newer model 880? Any thoughts? Thanks.

fishpharmer

Welcome to the Forestry Forum.
It's my understanding that newer saws have more "anti kick back" features.  I am no chainsaw expert.  I do know the 880 has an anti kickback hand gaurd brake, it works well.  Not sure about 084. 
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Cut4fun

084 has the chain break and hand guard too.   I had a 372 has same and the other day came straight back  (rear handle) and busted my shin like that. Things happen be careful.

sharkey

Problem is that these kickbacks happen faster than you can react.  Ive had a big old geardrive come shooting out of the cut from being pinched.  I wonder if the stump weight was an issue in your example?  The cut closed from the weight up the stump and the chain energy had no where to go.

Make it a standard practice to completely wrap your fingers and especially the thumb  around the handles.       

stump farmer

I'll bet that stump weight was a large factor in this. A smaller saw would have just bogged down instead of powering itself out of the cut. We'll treat this saw with more respect. Thanks for the replies.

Rocky_J

Big saw, big kickback if the operator isn't skilled at operating large saws. It's not a toy. That thoroughbred kicks a bit harder than your average mixed breed, mid range saw.  8)

beenthere

Seems getting a wedge or two in the cut to lift the stump would have been very helpful. Something had to have caught the outgoing teeth on the top of the bar to shove the saw back out the cut. Wedges are time consuming, but often do the trick.

Had a logger aquaintance several years back who cut for a walnut co. They required trees to be cut at the ground to get all the wood possible. Before the day of chaps, his saw came out of the cut while he was on his knees, and severed a good 1/4 inch gash above his kneecap. Couldn't pull the tendons back together for easy fix, so he was in tough shape permanently. Maybe today's surgeons would have better techniques, but sure is a testimony for chaps.
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

stump farmer

You're right wedges would have helped with safety and with finishing the flush cut. Correct hand position ensuring the brake is actuated during a kickback was probably awkward and not done while kneeling over the powerhead. He might have been under size on the bar with the tip still in the cut as well. Good reminder to have chaps sized and adjusted (not too loose) correctly.

sawguy21

I wonder if he was cutting with the nose or top of the bar. Stumps are awkward to work with. Glad he was not hurt.
old age and treachery will always overcome youth and enthusiasm

Ianab

Chainbrakes don't stop kickbacks, they just mean that if they happen, the chain hopefully stops. Only thing worse than getting whacked by a chainsaw, is getting whacked by one with the chain still spinning.  :o

I can see how that could happen with a long bar buried in stump, re-position the saw and the top of the tip gets back into contact with solid wood, with enough force to throw the saw back out anyway.

Ian
Weekend warrior, Peterson JP test pilot, Dolmar 7900 and Stihl MS310 saws and  the usual collection of power tools :)

Al_Smith

You can get kickback no matter what size the saw or what kind of chain you use  or weather it has a chain brake or not .

It the case of a stump most likely the thing fell or pinched on the top side of the bar and drove it back like a shot out of a cannon .The same thing can happen cutting a wedge on a big tree  or bucking a big log for that mtter

You just have to be careful and aware that the possiblity exists for kickback and plan accordingly .

northwoods1

Yes I think when you get in to larger saws with aggressive chain like that the kickback thing will always be something that can potentially happen and it can be severe. Cutting hardwoods it can really happen specially if you cut your rakers a little to far  :D I got it in the groin one time running cutting off a stump like that, I was kneeling on the ground and had got in the very bad habit of resting the rear handle of the saw on my upper thigh/groin area to support it and when a kickback finally happened it came back and drove in to me very hard :o to this day that injury bothers me some times. When your sawing you simply always have to be anticipating that kickback can and will happen.

Al_Smith

Once again I think we are stuck on terminoligy .Kickback or anti kick back chains or aggresiveness of the chain has nothing to do with pinching the top of the bar on essentually a down cut .In that situation the wood closes in on the portion of the chain which is running away from  the saw,not towards it .Action,reaction and it comes back on you .

All so called anti kick back chain will do is lessen the amount the thing can rise or come back if the tip portion gets caught but it doesn't totaly prevent it as some would suggest .

That term of kick back seems to be as misunderstood as the usage of the word "porting " .With that some seem to think that reworking a muffler is the same as "porting " a saw engine and I assure you it's not .Ah ,the English language,ain't it grand . :)

Kevin

Quote from: stump farmer on December 01, 2010, 06:31:11 PM
He might have been under size on the bar with the tip still in the cut as well.

This would be my guess too.

Rocky_J

It isn't the fault of the bar size. I cut stumps bigger than my bar size all the time, in fact almost 100% of the time. If my bar reaches to the middle of the stump then I'm good to go. If I have a 7 foot stump and a 42" bar on my MS880 then I'm not going to go buy a 7 foot bar to make the cut. In fact last week I didn't even bother dragging out the 880 for a 7 foot stump, I managed just fine with the 395XP and 32" bar.

Avoiding kickback is about technique, not bar size. Anybody who says differently could probably stand to improve their saw skills.

(Take note of my signature line before getting all butthurt over my comments)  ::)

Kevin

Yes it can be done, we've all done it with a shorter bar but with a longer bar you remove that hazard all together.
I don't care how good you are, when the bar nose is making contact with the wood bad things can happen, not all the time but the risk is present.

Rocky_J

Of course. But a risk is always present when walking across the street as well. A reasonable warning for those inexperienced at walking across the street, but rather redundant for those who walk across the street every day.

I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that anybody who is running an 084 should most likely have a good amount of experience working with smaller saws and fully understand all aspects of kickback. You don't take a teenager with his first driver's license and stick him in a Formula One race car or a semi truck. Saws over 100cc's should not be used by amateurs, period.

northwoods1

You can't get away from having the bar fully in a cut some times and cutting with the top nose of the bar to try and do that would be severely limiting the usefulness of the saw for sure. If its because of a pinch or the nose grabbing the wood to hard because type of chain is prone to it or filed incorrectly, and regardless of what term you call it by, the saw can be jerked or pushed around. When it comes back at you or does something unexpected it is kick back. The key and answer to this is to be able to control the saw at all times. People say don't cut over shoulder height. These people do not work in the woods professionally it isn't realistic. You can not cut without having having the top nose of the bar being in contact with the wood some times also or doing all manner of dangerous things with the saw, but the key is to be able to physically control the saw... if it is bigger than what you can handle taking in to consideration the dangerous results of it than a person shouldn't attempt it. Sometimes when you cutting a stump like that with the top of the bar you can have the saw fuly resting against the wood using the dogs to rotate the saw in the cut, that is safer as it eliminates the possibility or operator error of pushing it into rather than through the cut. Than just position so that when or if it does come out of the cut there is no harm done.

John Mc

It's not clear to me whether what happened here was what most people tend to think of for "kickback" -- that is, catching one or more teeth when cutting with the upper half of the nose of the bar, which throws the nose "up" (in relation to the plane of the bar) and back. Or was it the saw getting thrown out of the cut when the stump settled on to the upper straight portion of the bar. The latter could happen whether the nose was in the stump or not -- though I'd think this would tend to shove the handle/powerhead back into the operator, rather than the bar.
If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.   - Abraham Maslow

Al_Smith

Quote from: Kevin on December 02, 2010, 09:30:40 AM

I don't care how good you are, when the bar nose is making contact with the wood bad things can happen, not all the time but the risk is present.
That too but once again you don't have to catch the tip to get kick back .

Case in point ,by little bud Tom the tree guy nearly  lost a couple of fingers when an 066 caught the top of the bar and tossed him and saw from a big oak ,maybe a few years back .He had miss cut the wedge and went back in to trim the bottom loose without driving a wedge to hold it up .That 100 pound chunk of wood came down and out he came  saw on top .Saw won .Got in a hurry which will get you every time .

beenthere

I'd agree with John Mc take on what happened, although exactly what happened is unknown.

I enjoy reading the different opinions, but not the challenges that someone else is wrong.  ::) ::)
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Ianab

Yeah, you would need to sit down and have a good look at the stump to work out exactly how it happened. Both mechanisms could have pushed the saw back out.

Either way there are methods of avoiding it.

Ian
Weekend warrior, Peterson JP test pilot, Dolmar 7900 and Stihl MS310 saws and  the usual collection of power tools :)

Cut4fun

Quote from: Ianab on December 02, 2010, 02:46:06 PM

Either way there are methods of avoiding it.

Ian

1. is slowing down and pay attention  ;),  my bad habit.  I got in a hurry the other day dropping dead ash for a guy for firewood. Guess what happens when you cut through the hinge when your not paying attention and the saw is flying through the cut  :o.


beenthere

??
Were you cutting with the top of the bar and moving to/into the hinge?

I often make the plunge cut just behind the hinge and finish the hinge with the top of the bar. Don't want to saw into that hinge or the saw can kick back out.  :o
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Al_Smith

 :D Well you can argue and discuss it 'til the cows come home but truth be known they've been cutting big trees with short bars for years . It's all in how you do it ,some can some can't .

Oh say too that deal of cutting the hinge is something just about everyone has done at one time or another ,guilty myself .Lifting one off the hinge with a wedge has happened a time or two to most I might also add . Feet don't fail me now .  Run rabbit run .:o

HolmenTree

Years ago I had the same kickback situation with my Jonsered 920. Was felling a large spruce in the backcut with the top side of the bar,tree came back and pinched the chain, saw kicked out and back of rear handle hit me in the shin. *DanG near broke my leg. Even with safety pants on the skin on my shin never healed properly .The chain was new so the bar wouldn't pinch as well.
Then about 10 yrs later the exact same thing happened with my 066 Mag. This time the skin at that same point broke and today is scarred bad. Some of the worst pain I ever endurred.

Willard.
Making a living with a saw since age 16.

Cut4fun

My newbie self dont feel so bad about taking out my shin now  :o ;D.  Thanks for letting me know that even you pro guys get smacked every now and then too  :D :D :D.   8)

Al_Smith

I suppose we all have stories .Mine is an 048 that can flying out when a log collapsed on it .I shoud have  driven a wedge and I knew better .Getting in a hurry is what gets you every time . Needless to say I uttered some foul words  over that one and limped for a day or two . The handle of a saw is a lot tougher than a shin bone I'll tell ya that .

park ranger

The other day my co-worker put a skip tooth chain on our 044.  I went to do a plunge cut and wow, whats going on, then I checked the chain.  We never had a skip tooth on that saw before.  Needles to say no plunge cutting that day and from now on I'm checking the chain when I take it out.

Rocky_J

Huh?  ???  I've been running skip tooth chain on all my big saws for three years now and plunge cut all the time. A couple Husky 372s and a 395. I would put skip on the MS880 but the local dealers don't carry skip and I'm not buying a roll of .404 for a saw I use 3-4 times per year.

01crewcab

Kickbacks happen. Usually the fault of the operator. Had my 2100 come back on me one time. Didn't lose my fingers but probably should have. Had a skidder on my butt, didn't brush out around a big cedar, in a hurry, hit some brush on the off side and back came the saw. My fault. 
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clww

I think it's all about Position (of the saw bar), weight of the stump, and power of that 084. I've run mine, off and on, in really large trees since 2003. I have had it kick back the handle portion into my body three times-lightning fast, too. Never had the bar and chain come back on me though. Mine is an 084 with the chain brake and hand guard. This has been run with bars from 24" to 72"; .063/404 chains.
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Kevin

I agree that a full skip chain is more prone to kick back than standard sequence.

Cutter Tooth Sequences Explained

Quoteits lack of cutter teeth make it grabby in short cuts, and its kickback potential is high.

http://www.madsens1.com/bnc_sequence.htm

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