§ Manuals
Product Manuals & Parts Diagrams
Find your chainsaw's official manual to look up chain pitch, gauge, drive link count, and bar length. We link directly to manufacturer documentation — no sign-up required.
Why you need the manual before ordering chains
Your chainsaw's owner's manual contains the exact chain pitch, gauge, and drive link count. Getting any one of these wrong means the chain won't fit. Find your brand below, then search for your model number on the manufacturer's site.
Stihl chains use proprietary pitch/gauge combos — the manual lists the exact replacement chain number (e.g., 63 PM3 55).
Husqvarna manuals include the bar length, pitch, and gauge table — essential for ordering the correct chain.
Echo chainsaws use Oregon-compatible chains. Check the manual for the recommended bar/chain combo.
Poulan Pro manuals list chain specs as pitch × gauge × drive links — all three must match.
Oregon's Find Your Part tool cross-references any chainsaw model to the matching Oregon chain number.
DeWalt battery chainsaws use narrow-kerf chains. The manual specifies Oregon equivalent numbers.
Makita lists bar/chain part numbers by model — 36V cordless uses different chains than gas models.
Milwaukee M18 chainsaws use Oregon-type chains. The manual has the exact Oregon chain number.
Greenworks 80V models use a different bar mount than 40V — check the manual before ordering bars.
EGO chainsaws use Oregon chains. PowerLoad models have a specific tensioning procedure in the manual.
Ryobi 40V chainsaws use a 12" or 14" bar — the manual lists the correct chain loop count.
Craftsman gas and battery chainsaws use different chain types — always verify in the manual.
Found your part number?
Once you know your chain's specifications from the manual, use our Parts Finder to search for a compatible aftermarket replacement at a lower price.