How to Choose the Right Tungsten Carbide Chainsaw Chain
Share
Before choosing a carbide chain, ask yourself one question: do you actually need carbide?
Tungsten carbide chains are designed for abrasive cutting conditions where standard steel chain loses its edge quickly. However, carbide chain is not always the best option. In clean timber it typically cuts around 15–25% slower than standard steel chain, and carbide cutters are generally more brittle than steel if subjected to impacts or excessive cutting load.
Where carbide shines is in dirty, abrasive and contaminated environments, such as firewood with dirt or sand in the bark, storm-damaged timber, demolition work, burnt timber, roots or stump cutting close to the ground. In these conditions carbide chain can dramatically reduce sharpening frequency and downtime.
Keeping carbide chain sharp is critical. Running carbide chain blunt creates excess friction and heat. This increases load on the carbide joint, accelerates chain stretch and greatly increases the risk of carbide cutter damage or detachment.
This guide will help you select the correct carbide chain for your saw, timber type and application. Browse our tungsten carbide chainsaw chain range.
🧩 Quick Comparison Table
| Feature | Maya Pro-Tipped | Maya Endurance |
|---|---|---|
| Cutter Design | Tungsten tip brazed to steel cutter | Full carbide cutter with longitudinal weld |
| Kickback Profile | Non-safety, aggressive full-chisel | Reduced-kickback semi-chisel |
| Best For | Softwood, treated timber, demolition, storm debris and contaminated timber | Dense hardwoods, roots, burnt timber and controlled cutting applications |
| Power Suitability | Low to mid-powered saws | All saw sizes, best with mid to larger saws |
| Available Pitch | 3/8LP, .325", 3/8", .404" | 3/8", 3/8LP, .325" |
| Gauge Options | .043", .050", .058", .063", .080" | .043", .050", .058", .063" |
| Sharpening | Diamond file or disc | Diamond file or disc |
| Cutting Speed | Approx. 15–20% slower than steel | Approx. 20–25% slower than steel |
| Country of Origin | China | China |
🔍 Chain Type Summaries
🟡 Maya Pro-Tipped Carbide – Full-Chisel
Maya Pro-Tipped carbide chain is designed primarily for dirty and abrasive cutting environments where standard steel chain dulls rapidly.
The full-chisel cutter profile delivers fast cutting performance in lower-density timber while brazed tungsten carbide tips improve wear resistance in contaminated material including dirt, ash, demolition timber and storm debris.
Designed primarily for North American softwood cutting applications.
- Best for softwood, medium hardwood, demolition and treated timber
- Designed for contamination including dirt, ash, sand and embedded debris
- Non-safety full-chisel profile for aggressive cutting performance
- Recommended raker height: 0.65mm
🟢 Maya Endurance Carbide – Semi-Chisel
Maya Endurance carbide chain is designed for controlled cutting conditions where durability and reduced kickback are priorities.
Its semi-chisel cutter profile produces lower cutting shock and reduced impact loading compared with aggressive full-chisel tipped carbide chain, improving durability in dense hardwood applications.
The reduced-kickback design makes it well suited to storm cleanup, roots, dirty timber, firewood and mixed-species cutting where additional control is beneficial.
- Best for reduced-kickback and controlled cutting
- Well suited to dense Australian hardwoods including Ironbark, Red Gum and Grey Box
- Popular for storm cleanup, roots and property maintenance
- More tolerant of impact loading than tipped carbide chain
💡 How to Choose Based on Your Application
- Softwood, treated timber and demolition: Maya Pro-Tipped
- Dirty timber, storm cleanup and contaminated cutting: Carbide Chainsaw Chain Range
- Dense Australian hardwoods and roots: Maya Endurance
- Controlled cutting with reduced kickback: Maya Endurance
⚠️ Common Causes of Carbide Chain Damage
- Running chain blunt for extended periods
- Excessively low raker settings
- Forcing the chain through the cut instead of allowing the chain to self-feed
- Chain bounce or sudden impact loading during cutting
- Contact with rocks, steel, fencing wire or embedded metal
- Incorrect sharpening angles or non-diamond files
- Using aggressive non-safety chain on oversized saws
🛠️ Maintenance & Sharpening Tips
- Use diamond-coated files or grinding discs only
- Maintain minimum raker height of 0.65mm (.025")
- Sharpen at the first sign of reduced cutting performance
- Inspect cutters regularly in abrasive cutting conditions
- Always match chain pitch to the correct drive sprocket and guide bar tip sprocket
- Avoid sudden impacts, heavy levering or forcing the chain through cuts
📦 Custom Lengths & Support
We can supply custom loops to suit almost any bar size or drive-link count.
Most carbide chains supplied are pre-joined loops ready for immediate fitment and use.
Need advice? Contact us with your saw model, bar length, pitch and gauge and we’ll help recommend the correct carbide chain for your application.
Browse our full carbide chainsaw chain collection.