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Saturday, March 24, 2012

stihl vs husqvarna

stihl vs husqvarna in Chinatown

stihl vs husqvarna

stihl vs husqvarna Chinatown

stihl vs husqvarna Chinatown.Many others on this thread have given this excellent advice.
He passed that trait on to me.
He has a 325 mac and it is a beast.
The 25 means it weighs 25 pounds.
We even have an old mac6 and a mac4.
Each is for limbing or slicing baloney.
They all are manual oilers and they just fit my hand.
The manual oilers are a plus for me.
I despise a saw that has auto only oil.
In limbing you are oiling everything.
In logs the chain is starving.
In dried wood and ripping, the bar is smoking hot and the chain is grinding away.
I can get a stihl saw for dealer cost.
My friend sells them.
My uncle purchased one and it was a pain.
No manual oiler over ride, hard to start, and it would die when you left off the throttle.
I used quite a bit of 037 and 041 stihls through the years.
Their high rpm and tinny whine did not cover the fact that they did not cut any better than our old 1010 mccollughs.
The stihl just had a big price tag.
Husqvarna is a nice smooth saw and it has a price to match.
I stick to the old macs because they are damn fast cutters and they turn half the rpms of the new saws.
My hands go numb within minutes of handling one of those tuetonic vibrators.
The huskys are real screamers and they will shake you more than a stihl.
They hold together a lot better too.
I also can sharpen the chain on an old 1010 while i drink a bottle of pop.
If you can not sharpen the chain, you should not have the saw.
Those old slow saws rely on deep gullets and lots of rake clearance to get it done.
I also like the feel of the saw when the motor drops down and cuts with brute power.
At idle they sound like an old indian chieftian.
My double eagle mccollugh was the last true mac saw made.
It was a last hurrah for a company going under.
I keep it for trimming egos.
It is factory made to cut damn fast.
The rakers are factory cut down and you just hold on and ease back on her so the engine does not stall in the cut.
When you are cutting honey locust; those four inch shavings are accompanied by sparks.
Eyes open and jaws drop when you zip through a fifteen inch locust in a slow five count.
A carbide blade dies instantly in dried locust and the teeth flying makes a nice zing sound.
Carbide is for weenies that cut dirt and can not handle a file.
I also have a few lombards, homelites, a poulan timbermaster, and a few brands you never heard of.
I discover that the older saws are easy to maintain and they do not break you up on repairs.
Look around and see what is going for sale in the used piles.
You will probably be pleasantly surprised by what is out there, cheap.
After all we metalists should fix our own toyzzzzzz.
Ï»¿ i stick to the previous macs because they are damn debauched carvers and they turn half the rpms of the new saws.
Those old slow saws trust along late gullets and lots of rake clearance to get it done.
I besides wish the find of the saw when the motor drops down and cuts with brute power.
The rakers are mill cut down and you merely hold on and still back on her so the engine does not stall in the cut.
Ï»¿ those old slow saws trust along late gullets and lots of rake clearance to get it done.
I besides wish the find of the saw when the motor drops down and cuts with brute power.
The rakers are mill cut down and you merely hold on and still back on her so the engine does not stall in the cut.
Ï»¿ i besides wish the find of the saw when the motor drops down and cuts with brute power.
The rakers are mill cut down and you merely hold on and still back on her so the engine does not stall in the cut.. stihl vs husqvarna

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