I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair

   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #1  

happysawer

Silver Member
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104
Tractor
starting to look a them
After using my chain saw i needed a good axe to remove stumps, looked at what STHIL had to offer and found they were IMHO over priced for the quality they offfered, both Lowes and Home Depot have a few but not at their stores near me, and they wernt willing to have them sent to my local stores and some had poor reviews.

There are many axes found on the Net. but finding the correct type at a fair price not an easy task, in searching the Net. i found Garett Wade Tools and this i think is just the axe i feel i need, they offer a 90 day return policy also.

German-Made Forest Axe | Full-Size Tree Chopper | Garrett Wade

What do my fellow forum members think about this axe and this company?
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #2  
looks like a nice one. I also have been looking for one too.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #3  
After using my chain saw i needed a good axe to remove stumps, looked at what STHIL had to offer and found they were IMHO over priced for the quality they offfered, both Lowes and Home Depot have a few but not at their stores near me, and they wernt willing to have them sent to my local stores and some had poor reviews.

There are many axes found on the Net. but finding the correct type at a fair price not an easy task, in searching the Net. i found Garett Wade Tools and this i think is just the axe i feel i need, they offer a 90 day return policy also.

German-Made Forest Axe | Full-Size Tree Chopper | Garrett Wade

What do my fellow forum members think about this axe and this company?

That link popped me to a shoppingwaves .net site.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#4  
looks like a nice one. I also have been looking for one too.

They informed me the axe i ordered is on backorder they reduced my price and will bill my credit card when they ship it, i found another axe at Harbor Freight for $27.99+tax it, has really good reviews with a few pictures i went over to their store and bought one to use until i get the other one.
4-1/2 lb. Hickory Axe
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#5  
That link popped me to a shoppingwaves .net site.

I see this and don't like it someone highjacked the link, just go direct to Garrett Wade Woodworking Tools & Supplies, Shop Tools, Hand Tools, Measuring Tools, Knives & Drills
And do a search for POWERFUL GERMAN-MADE CHOPPING TOOl.
I was informed it was on back order and would ship when it arrived, i left it on order but went to harbor Freight and for $27.99 bought a 4.5 pound hickory handle axe to use until the other one arrives.
4-1/2 lb. Hickory Axe
Hope this link still works.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #6  
Have you looked at Fiskars?
 
Last edited:
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Have you looked at Fiskars?
I have a bunch of Fiskars products mostly shears and a pole saw&clipper, great products and great customer service if you have a problem will give them a look at that link and thanks.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #8  
I also think Fiskars are very good , I know several people that own and use their splitting ax and it is very good and well built.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #9  
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #10  
It depends on what you want to do with the axe, the Fisker's splitting axe performs extremely well for splitting but is a fairly miserable tool for limbing and chopping. For limbing and chopping I have always preferred a 2.5 lb double bit cruiser's axe. It is light enough to not be terribly fatiguing to use and pack around.
Just my preference and 2 cents in the discussion.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#11  
It depends on what you want to do with the axe, the Fisker's splitting axe performs extremely well for splitting but is a fairly miserable tool for limbing and chopping. For limbing and chopping I have always preferred a 2.5 lb double bit cruiser's axe. It is light enough to not be terribly fatiguing to use and pack around.
Just my preference and 2 cents in the discussion.

It's always good to hear from people that have used the tools, so we can better understand how they preformed.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #12  
I agree about the Fisker splitting axe, good for splitting but not for chopping like one would use a regular axe for, Fisker shape is designed for "easy" entry into the wood and quick flare for splitting.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #13  
Now I'm getting a good lesson here from you guys thanks for that....
even though not yet ready for one to split wood until spring.....
yeah lots happening once we move into our house, so all this time is soaking up info time....so thanks for all this....
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #14  
Fisker's makes both chopping and splitting axe designs. Any axe or maul with a wood handle is an instant no-go for me. Finding quality wood replacement handles is getting difficult and costly. Most stocked being low quality.

An axe mattock will chop out roots easier than any axe.

SmartSelect_20201028-111711_Chrome.jpg
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #15  
I'm having trouble envisioning how you're going to use an axe for stump removal. Not only is it hard work, but stump wood is arguably the hardest wood in the tree.

Anyway, these points have mostly been made I guess, but as a former axe enthusiast I'll summarize my take on them:
  1. If you just need an axe to cut wood in the forest, I wouldn't spend a great deal of money on a _brand_. I'd focus more on what you want for axe head weight and the kind of handle.
  2. If the handle is wood it's eventually going to break, learning to re-hang an axe is a good skill but hard to master, so maybe one of these newfangled fiberglass handles is what you want.
  3. I've had to stop chopping wood because of my back so my memory is imperfect, but my favorite axe head for forest work was a 4+ pound one from harbor freight, vs. the lighter ones sold at home depot. The only problem was that it flew off its handle because of improper manufacturing on the first use, but that doesn't diminish the head once you rehang it. (A safety hazard though!)
  4. The most important thing to minimize your chopping will be your care of the blade. Any 8 year old kid in 1850 knew a lot more than most 2020 adults about how to treat their blades and keep them sharp. Make sure you don't take a grinder to it and lose the temper because you overheated it. I like a file and a mild stropping to de-burr.

All that said, I have various fancier axes, but really I was happiest with my harbor freight head. Keep it sharp and it really moved wood.

If you're doing _other_ kinds of things with an axe, like woodworking projects, then you need to look at completely different axes. A broad axe is a really good thing to have, especially if you want to make a go of making your own axe handles with ... an axe ... because you want to be a badass. :)
Again, I don't spend money on brands, in fact my favorite broad axe is a "second", a no-name brand sold at reduced price because of flaws. It was like $12 online, new.

Confession: I was a big Roy Underhill fan, and really liked not using power tools. Now I'm old and powertools are what I'm forced to use. Dangerous, noisy, gas powered garbage. Though I'm moving to electrics for some things.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I bought this axe yesterday from Harbor Freight gave it a little filing to dress it's edge, took it out and wacked at a hard dead bucked tree item, it really made to chips fly and head stayed on solid.

So for $29 i will keep and use it since the other axe ordered from Garett Wade, is back ordered and have no idea when it will ship out.
4-1/2 lb. Hickory Axe
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I'm having trouble envisioning how you're going to use an axe for stump removal. Not only is it hard work, but stump wood is arguably the hardest wood in the tree.

Anyway, these points have mostly been made I guess, but as a former axe enthusiast I'll summarize my take on them:
  1. If you just need an axe to cut wood in the forest, I wouldn't spend a great deal of money on a _brand_. I'd focus more on what you want for axe head weight and the kind of handle.
  2. If the handle is wood it's eventually going to break, learning to re-hang an axe is a good skill but hard to master, so maybe one of these newfangled fiberglass handles is what you want.
  3. I've had to stop chopping wood because of my back so my memory is imperfect, but my favorite axe head for forest work was a 4+ pound one from harbor freight, vs. the lighter ones sold at home depot. The only problem was that it flew off its handle because of improper manufacturing on the first use, but that doesn't diminish the head once you rehang it. (A safety hazard though!)
  4. The most important thing to minimize your chopping will be your care of the blade. Any 8 year old kid in 1850 knew a lot more than most 2020 adults about how to treat their blades and keep them sharp. Make sure you don't take a grinder to it and lose the temper because you overheated it. I like a file and a mild stropping to de-burr.

All that said, I have various fancier axes, but really I was happiest with my harbor freight head. Keep it sharp and it really moved wood.

If you're doing _other_ kinds of things with an axe, like woodworking projects, then you need to look at completely different axes. A broad axe is a really good thing to have, especially if you want to make a go of making your own axe handles with ... an axe ... because you want to be a badass. :)
Again, I don't spend money on brands, in fact my favorite broad axe is a "second", a no-name brand sold at reduced price because of flaws. It was like $12 online, new.

Confession: I was a big Roy Underhill fan, and really liked not using power tools. Now I'm old and powertools are what I'm forced to use. Dangerous, noisy, gas powered garbage. Though I'm moving to electrics for some things.
It's the stump of a holly bush i cut down, just a small stump not a tree stump, i wacked it a little to test the $29 dollar 4.5# 35" Harbor Frieght axe bought yesterday, worked very well this morning hope i have made things cleaer.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #18  
It's the stump of a holly bush i cut down, just a small stump not a tree stump, i wacked it a little to test the $29 dollar 4.5# 35" Harbor Frieght axe bought yesterday, worked very well this morning hope i have made things cleaer.

Seems you like the same axe head I did :) Just careful with that crappy HF manufacturing, when my axe head flew off it could have hit someone, and there were people around that day. But the head is just a very nice weight.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair
  • Thread Starter
#19  
Seems you like the same axe head I did :) Just careful with that crappy HF manufacturing, when my axe head flew off it could have hit someone, and there were people around that day. But the head is just a very nice weight.

Please post a picture of your axe you say head flew off, think your wrong about the Mfg. quality of the Harbor Frieght Axe.
 
   / I found after using my chainsaw i needed a good AXe try finding a good one at a fair #20  
Please post a picture of your axe you say head flew off, think your wrong about the Mfg. quality of the Harbor Frieght Axe.

Lol, pictures or it didn't happen eh? It was tragic, I blogged about it at the time. Here are the pics:

The handle after it fell out of the axe:axe1.JPG

The fluff which was in the handle (fluff?): axe2.JPG

And the handle, which had many flaws which were filled with some kind of putty:handle.JPG

Not knowing how poorly this handle was mounted in the axe, naturally it flew off with my first or second swing.
 

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