https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chainsaw_safety_features#Chain_brake
I think you're confusing the snap of an upward kick as the only thing to be concerned about vs a bound cut where a saw will push out of the cut backwards. quoted from the wikipedia summary.
In the case of a kickback event the operator's left hand may be violently dislodged from the handle and the top hand guard will be thrown onto his hand, forcing activation of the chainbrake.
I believe this is from someone at husqvarna because the next section of text talks about husqvarna's intertial chain brake. There are a lot of saws here in the states from around the time that chain brakes became mandatory on consumer saws that had only the hand activated type and not the inertial type. They were saws that didn't have a chain brake at all before one was added on.
That wikipedia article is at best misleading. It refers to " models also incorporate a link between the top handle and the chain brake trigger, applying the brake if the saw's bar is forced suddenly upwards. This is known as an "inertia" chainbrake and will allow activation of the chainbrake even if the operator's left hand is not removed from the handle. "
This inaccurate. The inertia trigger mechanism is a counterweight and spring system totally independent of any of the handles.
It goes on to say that when using a felling cut, i.e. holding the saw on its side that the hand is not in a position to trigger the chainbrake but it doesn't matter!!!!! Because any kickback is not in line with the body!!!
Apart from the legs............
Generally, when people speak of operating the brake with the hand it's referring to the practice of setting the brake before moving around with the saw still running but not cutting. This is good practice and highly recommended, but does not represent the way the brake is designed to work in the instance of
most kickback scenarios.
It is true that occasionally the brake could be activated by the users hand during "pushback", but usually pushback caused by the cut closing and pinching the chain will also pinch the bar to such an extent as to trap the saw as well. Also, anyone using the top of the bar
should be trained or experienced enough to be aware of the potential and be prepared to counteract it.
I am fully aware that less than 30 years ago saws were produced that had no chain brake at all. I still have a couple (but don't use them often, if at all.)
It's also true that there are (or perhaps more accurately were) two types of brakes: the first from around the early seventies which was purely manually operated, and the "automatic", which was first seen around 10 years later, and is what we have now.
Sorry to bang on, but it's a subject that is still ignored, poorly taught and in some cases wilfully dismissed as OTT safety tosh.
I lost a good mate years ago to a saw that kicked back but had a broken non functioning chain brake. Yes, his fault for not checking it..........