Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00???

   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #1  

dukenyc

Bronze Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2005
Messages
87
Location
Upstate NY
Tractor
JD 4100
I need to get a good string trimmer style brush cutter. The local Stihl Dealer advised me to get the fs450K w/ the brush blade. It is $850 with the blade and string head. It looks like a good trimmer, but is a bit more than I was looking to spend.

I need to cut sumac and 1-2" thick brush and saplings alongside a trail. I will use my CUT to maintain the trail, this will just be to work along the edges and to reach into areas I cant get the CUT. The only other tool i could think of to do the job was the pole -pruner (chainsaw on a stick), and it is $600.

I guess what I am asking is if this overkill or if there is a comparable tool for less money from another manufacturer.

Thanks for the help.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #2  
Duke, there's no doubt that FS450K is a fine machine for the purpose, but in my opinion you could drop back several models in the Stihl line and get one for half that price that would work very well. I've forgotten the model number now that I bought in '95 for about $350, but I used the circle saw blade on it quite a bit and it worked just fine for big vines and small saplings up to a couple of inches or more in diameter.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #3  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I need to get a good string trimmer style brush cutter. The local Stihl Dealer advised me to get the fs450K w/ the brush blade. It is $850 with the blade and string head. It looks like a good trimmer, but is a bit more than I was looking to spend.

I need to cut sumac and 1-2" thick brush and saplings alongside a trail. I will use my CUT to maintain the trail, this will just be to work along the edges and to reach into areas I cant get the CUT. The only other tool i could think of to do the job was the pole -pruner (chainsaw on a stick), and it is $600.

I guess what I am asking is if this overkill or if there is a comparable tool for less money from another manufacturer.

Thanks for the help. )</font>

The only brush blade I've had success with is the one that has chainsaw-style teeth (not a chain) around the edges. It works better for me than either the circular-saw style teeth or the cross-shape blade. I don't think any manufacturer would include the chansaw-tooth blade as original equipment! Having said that, I think I'll try the pole pruner next for versatility. I think Stihl makes at least one model with interchangeable pole pruner and weed trimmer heads.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #4  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I think Stihl makes at least one model with interchangeable pole pruner and weed trimmer heads. )</font>

Like the FS130; string trimmer, hedge shears, pole saw, tiller, sweeper, and edger. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #5  
I'll second the comment about the blades with the chainsaw teeth on them. I just got one last week and I am running it with a Husqvarna 225 trimmer/cutter. That's half the horses of what your Stihl dealer is proposing (if model numbers relate to engine cc like I think they do). I had a circular saw style blade and felt like I was never getting anywhere with it. I was going to get a bigger machine (until I saw the price of the Stihl 450), but my JD dealer also sells Shindawa and he had these 9 inch Shindawa blades with either 6 or 12 chainsaw teeth. I thought I would gamble 20 dollars instead of 850. I got the six tooth model and it will knock down finger sized saplings as fast as you can swing it. 2 and 3 inch stuff requires a little concentrated effort, but still less than 30 seconds. Plus, if you know how to file your chain saw chain, you can sharpen this puppy yourself! It binds and hangs up much less than the circular saw style blade did and I haven't had it kick back at all -- yet.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #6  
I bought one of these a few years ago and it is awesome:

Beaver Blade

I run it on my old beat up Ryobi Gas Trimmer and it cuts through thick branches and black berries like nothing. I've even used it to prune the lower branches off large 40 foot Douglas Firs. It is now my "pole saw" for anything I can reach with it.

It is probably super dangerous but IMO anything that works well usually is.

My only regret is not finding it before I destroyed my carpal tunnels hacking down blackberries with one of those crappy brush blades.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #7  
I had the Beaver Blade for my DR string trimmer/mower, and, yes, it's a great tool for taking down stuff on up to about 4.5", but I thought the circle saw type blade on my Stihl worked just fine for stuff in the 2" range.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #8  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I bought one of these a few years ago and it is awesome:

Beaver Blade

I run it on my old beat up Ryobi Gas Trimmer and it cuts through thick branches and black berries like nothing. I've even used it to prune the lower branches off large 40 foot Douglas Firs. It is now my "pole saw" for anything I can reach with it.

It is probably super dangerous but IMO anything that works well usually is.

My only regret is not finding it before I destroyed my carpal tunnels hacking down blackberries with one of those crappy brush blades. )</font>

I haven't tried the beaver blade, which looks like it is made with actual chainsaw chain. The blade I was referring to is one piece of steel, with chainsaw-shaped teeth cut into the outer edge. It cuts a thinner kerf than a chainsaw. Having not used both types, I can't compare, but mine cuts like crazy.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #9  
Chuck, you're right about the Beaver Blade being an actual chain saw chain. I don't think I've seen the other type that you've described.
 
   / Good Brushcutter/stringtrimmer- $850.00??? #10  
I have had all three, and the Beaver blade (with chain) I like the best. It did not fit on my new Stihl cutter, so am running the blade with stamped/sharpened teeth on the order of chainsaw teeth. The regular sawblade with pointed teeth just gets dull too quickly and doesn't have enough kerf to make a quick cut.

I can be happy with the one I have. I had been told the Stihl warranty would not hold if they knew I had the Beaver blade. I used it anyway for years.

I had the FS90 Stihl, and now have the FS120. New numbers may be different now.
 

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