chain saws

   / chain saws #11  
Gordon
I have to say the 038 magnum is a helluva of a saw.i have one myself that does all my cutting.I have my eye out for another.
I am no fan of the husky myself.I have a few buddies that are not exactly pleased with them.but I admit they are the ones from rural king and not the professional saws.
 
   / chain saws #12  
There's a forum here specifically for chainsaws.

butt -
I've 5 chainsaws, with bars running from 10" to 42":
3 Stihls - an 021 I bought new about 10 or 15 years ago, runs like a champ. Two 660's I bought used about 2 yrs ago, modded and run like powerhouses, good for CSM.

2 Efco's - a 35cc I got marked down to $50 from $220 and a 62CC I won in a raffle. They are so-so.

Most saw mfg's make two lines - 1 for big box stores, one for pro's, the Husky 55 was in the pro-line I believe.
BUT around here the husky support is all for naught.
If you can't do your own work with mailorder parts don't buy a machine that might break without good local support.

/edit - and I've also got a Woodmizer LT10 to make the trees into long flat pieces after the 660's get them to lay down and the 021 or 60CC Efco makes them take off their branches.
 
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   / chain saws #13  
Nothing worse than a saw that won't work when you need it. You have the right idea, pony up and buy a new saw. If you like that 038, then try the new MS362's...awesome saw. I might be a little prejudiced...I own 7 Stihls and won't buy any other brand.
 
   / chain saws #14  
I agree, time for saw shopping. And their are MANY good choices, but they are going to cost $$$.

The 455 rancher is NOT a 55 or 51. The 55 and 51 were built like a pro saw with pro saw features. The 455 is built like every other cheap department store saw. The quality just isnt there. That dont mean husky is bad, it just means their saws that get sold @ lowes et al are just a small step above the poulans, craftsmans, and homelites.

For a new saw, if you were happy with the size of the 455 (when it ran), take a look at the dolmar/makita 6400/6401.

The only downfall to dolmars is they dont have as many dealers as others. But rest assured, they are an excellent and reliable pro-grade saw.

But just going out on a limb, since you had a 455 rancher, I am guessing that dealer support wasnt too important. Since it seems you were working on the saw yourself.
 
   / chain saws
  • Thread Starter
#15  
A note to let you know that yesterday evening I went to my local sthil dealer.
He was out of stock on all of his 50 to 60 cc range sthil saws. Then showed me a echo 500p. It is as I was told a 50 cc professional quality saw with a 5 year warrentee. He also told me that he has been dealing the echo brand for over 5 years now and has not one been brought back in for warrentee work.
I hope that this will be a saw that I can depend on for years to come:thumbsup:
 
   / chain saws #16  
A note to let you know that yesterday evening I went to my local sthil dealer.
He was out of stock on all of his 50 to 60 cc range sthil saws. Then showed me a echo 500p. It is as I was told a 50 cc professional quality saw with a 5 year warrentee. He also told me that he has been dealing the echo brand for over 5 years now and has not one been brought back in for warrentee work.
I hope that this will be a saw that I can depend on for years to come:thumbsup:

I guess wether or not to get the 50cc saw depends on your needs.

If just an occasional user, then it would fit the bill nicely.

But if you cut any amount of firewood at all, I would want something a little bigger for a 1 saw plan.
 
   / chain saws #17  
I had a couple of 55's/61's/357/359/362 from new and they were ok never started as well or as nice to use as the stihl's (026/ms260/036) but no real problems . I still have a 55 riding on the dozer now good backup saw.
 
   / chain saws #18  
I have an old Homelite, bought it used in '75. Ran for decades with no problems until the check valve in the fuel cap disappeared and it started leaking gas whenever it wasn't upright. Not a good idea to have a saw leaking gas in the woods. By then, Homelite no longer made the part, so it sits on the shelf.

Replaced that with a Stihl 029. Same displacement as the Homelite, but cuts wood almost twice as fast. But a bear to start; finally figured out the system, full choke, pull 12 times, go to half choke and it fires up. 2 dealers worked on it, no change. 3rd dealer didn't even work on it before he said that was a problem with that model.

Best saw is my little Shindaiwa 357, an arborist's model, about the handle is on top, bar is about 10", weighs about 8 pounds and it runs like a champ. Starts on 2nd or 3rd pull, light weight, can reach out and hold it one handed if I have to. Because it's small and light I can use it all day. I fall trees up to about 10" diameter with it, then take off all the limbs. Shindaiwas are spendy, but worth it.
 
   / chain saws #19  
Replaced that with a Stihl 029. Same displacement as the Homelite, but cuts wood almost twice as fast. But a bear to start; finally figured out the system, full choke, pull 12 times, go to half choke and it fires up. 2 dealers worked on it, no change. 3rd dealer didn't even work on it before he said that was a problem with that model.

028/029 were horrible saws not pro though so cant compare to 026 036 etc
 
   / chain saws #20  
I have an old Homelite, bought it used in '75. Ran for decades with no problems until the check valve in the fuel cap disappeared and it started leaking gas whenever it wasn't upright. Not a good idea to have a saw leaking gas in the woods. By then, Homelite no longer made the part, so it sits on the shelf.

Replaced that with a Stihl 029. Same displacement as the Homelite, but cuts wood almost twice as fast. But a bear to start; finally figured out the system, full choke, pull 12 times, go to half choke and it fires up. 2 dealers worked on it, no change. 3rd dealer didn't even work on it before he said that was a problem with that model.

Best saw is my little Shindaiwa 357, an arborist's model, about the handle is on top, bar is about 10", weighs about 8 pounds and it runs like a champ. Starts on 2nd or 3rd pull, light weight, can reach out and hold it one handed if I have to. Because it's small and light I can use it all day. I fall trees up to about 10" diameter with it, then take off all the limbs. Shindaiwas are spendy, but worth it.

I dont like the tophandles unless you are climbing or working from a bucket.
They are more dangerous than a standard saw IMO (and most others opinion).

But to each his own. And the 029/290 is not really a good stihl. One one of the lower end 50cc+ saws they make.

But I have heard good about shindaiwa. There are quite a few other smaller brands (mostly japanese I think) that are starting to make a good name in these small 2-strokes. Shindaiwa, Tanaka, and Efco are the few that come to mind.
 
 
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