It's amazing to me people will trip over a dollar to pick up a dime. To me it's wasting time, money, and sanity to deal with these cheap knock off. Time is my most valuable asset, if something costs me down time...I move on from that brand permanently. I like stuff that is just as good 20 years later as it was on day one. If one of these saws breaks, just throw away the entire thing and buy a new one...it's the new model.
Price point selling is why China can do what they do.
With all that said, my $99 factory reconditioned Poulan 42cc saw is somewhere over 10 years old, cuts 6 cords of firewood for me every year, plus several other trees for family and friends. Only repairs have been one fuel line for 20 cents and 1 coil for about $50. That was half the price of the saw, but hey, $150.20 into a saw over 10+ years works out fine for me. :thumbsup:
Echos are good saws. Not that I own any, but they are good from what I see. Stihl man here, but give credit where credit is due.
With all that said, my $99 factory reconditioned Poulan 42cc saw is somewhere over 10 years old, cuts 6 cords of firewood for me every year, plus several other trees for family and friends. Only repairs have been one fuel line for 20 cents and 1 coil for about $50. That was half the price of the saw, but hey, $150.20 into a saw over 10+ years works out fine for me. :thumbsup:
What's your secret to keeping the chain tensioner from blowing out the plastic?
Old poulan's were good saws, especially the poulan pro versions.
I was at my cabin one day cutting trees and my father ran over his dolmar sachs saw with the tractor. We needed another saw to keep going so I drove down the mountain and into town. The only place open at 7 at night was a ace hardware. I purchased a 46cc poulan. It had the weird wheel that tensioned the chain with a keeper that provided a stop in the plastic cover. I could never get the chain to stay tensioned as the roller always lost tension. The chain came off on any type of side cut. It's now the saw I lend out and I have 4 new chain tensioners in the box because that saw goes through them like candy.
The saw starts good, but it costs me time and money. I would rather just apply the money on the front end and save my time and frustration.