Does the number of links of a chainsaw chain affect the sprocket

chainsawpowertools

How does the gauge of the chain effect the drive sprocket?

I bought a new bar and chain, the pitch is .325, the sprocket is .325 and gauge is .063, but the number of links is 81 instead of 74.

Will it work?

Best Answer

Gauge is the thickness of the drive tangs on the saw chain. Chain gauge must match the groove width on the bar.

enter image description here

The only effect chain gauge will have on standard spur sprockets is the contact area it presents on the spur teeth, thicker gauge = wider contact area.

enter image description here

Rim Sprockets use a pocket that must be wide enough to allow the drive tangs to seat.

enter image description here

Pitch is the length of the links that make up the chain, basically the distance spanned by three rivets divided by 2 and chain pitch must match the sprocket pitch so the chain is properly driven.

enter image description here

The reason for measuring over the span of three rivets and taking the average to calculate pitch is that the drive link has the rivets closer together than the tooth and span links.

enter image description here

Where the pitch matters, as shown on the simpler spur sprocket chain drive mechanism on an electric pole saw. Chain drive tangs must be the right distance apart to engage the sprocket teeth properly.

enter image description here

This leaves the remaining variable which is the number of links. More links, longer chain which must of course be accommodated by having a longer bar. Since the chain is seven links longer (81-74), the chain will be about 2.3" longer. If the bar nose radius on the new bar is equal to that of the old bar, your new bar should be about 1" longer.

enter image description here

Also, there are different geometries on saw bars that can be used to take up that extra length which only can be seen by comparing the old bar against the new bar.