Battery powered chainsaw

   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,091  
I had a Stihl MS291 20" saw that constantly gave trouble, parts breaking, I used Stihl oil mix & careful with it. Finally muffler fell off, bolts stripped out of the jug. Probably 40 hours use max. I gave it to the tree cutter here last spring when I had lots of trees down. Every saw he had was Stihl.
Mine still had $600 sticker on it. Stihl dealer I bought it from said just past warranty.
I have a small Greenworks 40V saw I've had for years...never a problem. If I cut lots of trees of course I'd go with gas.
I helped Dad cut trees and in the 50s he had a David Bradley 4 cycle saw. Manual oiler. Wish I had it for nostalgia.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,092  
40 years ago I bought my first cordless drill driver and flashlight set from Makita with the 7.2 battery.

Contractor friends laughed saying nice toy.

My first project was sheetrocking a 650 square feet cottage and I never looked back...

I still have that combo kit and it never let me down.

Almost 10 years ago I bought my first Stihl battery saw for the Christmas Tree Farm and now it's all we use.

No more keeping 4 gas chain saws just to make sure 2 would always be ready.

During the busy season the hundreds of daily start/stop took a toll on the gas saws... battery saws no issue,

Every fall I would take the gas saws to the dealer for seasonal tune up where my battery saws have never seen the dealer after sale.

The SF Bay Area fuel causes a lot of carb problems across the board for seasonal equipment... garden tractors, Farmall Cub, Chainsaws, Generators, etc...

For all I know the plan is to weed out gas power tools... it's illegal to use gas powered blowers and brush cutters in a growing number of cities here...

Battery is an investment with the greatest pain the first purchase buying battery, charger and tool.

My thinking is Stihl AP line will have longevity and so far battery enhancements are backward compatible...

It does make it a little easier on the pocketbook that my battery tools are used in business and expensed...

I probably should sell the gas powered equipment that no longer gets used.

It's a regional thing as I have picked up Honda Mowers, Echo Chainsaws and Trimmers for free as households get rid of them at the annual bulky pickup day...
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,093  
I had a Stihl MS291 20" saw that constantly gave trouble, parts breaking, I used Stihl oil mix & careful with it. Finally muffler fell off, bolts stripped out of the jug. Probably 40 hours use max.
??? what do you think happened? Factory defect? Counterfeit saw?

I've owned a lot of Stihl saws, and they've all been great. I will say 20" is a heck of a lot of bar on a saw as small as a MS291, I wouldn't even run a bar that big on an 036/362, given the amount of oak and hickory we cut. The softwood guys north and west get away with longer bars per cc than we do here on the east coast.

I gave it to the tree cutter here last spring when I had lots of trees down. Every saw he had was Stihl.
Yeah, that's normal here, too. Most of the tree companies seem to be Stihl only or Husqvarna only, with Stihl having the larger share of that pie around here. I'm pretty friendly with two local tree guys, and one is all-Stihl, while the other buys Stihl for his crews but prefers Husqvarna for himself.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,094  
Love my Ego battery saw. I live at the end of a mile long driveway through a forest. When trees or branches fall across the road, it is wonderful to go cut it up and get it out of the way right away without having to gather stuff and work to start my big gas Stihl Farm Boss. I have cut 14 inch trees up with little problem. I have other Ego stuff and multiple batteries for major situations. I also have multiple chains - although I need to take them in now to get sharpened after two years.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,095  
I haven't really been following the brands and models, but I thought most were operating off much higher voltages than the average cordless drill or impact driver. The only name brand I remember seeing that shared batteries between chainsaw and typical power tools was the Milwaukee M18 system, and I think that was a pretty tiny saw.
All EGo batteries work in all EGo tools. All are 56V.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,096  
??? what do you think happened? Factory defect? Counterfeit saw?

I've owned a lot of Stihl saws, and they've all been great. I will say 20" is a heck of a lot of bar on a saw as small as a MS291, I wouldn't even run a bar that big on an 036/362, given the amount of oak and hickory we cut. The softwood guys north and west get away with longer bars per cc than we do here on the east coast.


Yeah, that's normal here, too. Most of the tree companies seem to be Stihl only or Husqvarna only, with Stihl having the larger share of that pie around here. I'm pretty friendly with two local tree guys, and one is all-Stihl, while the other buys Stihl for his crews but prefers Husqvarna for himself.
I used 18" & 20" bars. I bought it from Ace hardware, Stihl dealer, $599.95+tax. Maybe a lemon, counterfeit, who knows...but one problem after another.
I'm sure tree guy was happy, maybe fixed everything. What's funny is he had lots of workers here...one grabbed my saw, couple pulls, it started & cut down a large Bradford Pear with it...no muffler & LOUD!
Today I used Greenworks 60V a lot...but white pine (soft) & it sure worked great.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,097  
I can’t get the RPM’s out of a lectric saw I like to move fast through a downed tree or bucking logs, but I recognize and appreciate the surging popularity of the battery saw.

Had a DeWalt 60V with a 18” bar. Just ran too slow for me. I sold it.
Really like the looks of the Stihl MSA 300, but man is it expensive….
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,098  
When I was shopping for my electric saw, part of what tipped the decision to DeWalt was the fact that they had contracted with Oregon to make the bars and chains.
Milwaukee does the same thing, as do several other chainsaw manufacturers. (don;t let the name painted on some of the bars fool you.)

I suspect Oregon, Tsmura, and Carlton are probably making bars for half the other brand stamps you'll see on the market, but each manufacturer can specify a different mounting pattern.
That is correct.
BTW, Oregon owns Carlton.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,099  
I liked Makitas approach of twin batteries from years ago.
I think the Stihl 300 with twin batts might be the way to roll.
Especially if you could have a single batt for a short bar for light limbing, then switch to a 20” bar and twin batts for logs.
 
   / Battery powered chainsaw #1,100  
Milwaukee has jumped on the dual battery bandwagon. Their model 2827-22 is claimed to have the power of a 70cc gas chainsaw.

I have not laid eyes on one yet.
 
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