</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I think the craftsman is a poulan )</font>
Probably so; I know they used to be anyway.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( He sharpened my craftsman for me and tried it out on some tree tops, and said he didnt see how i cut with it )</font>
I've owned two Poulans and one of my brothers had a Stihl. Now I know that the Stihl is a great saw, and my brother's Stihl was a larger saw than my Poulan, so the darned thing was too heavy for an old man like me. I much preferred the Poulans and couldn't have asked for anything to cut better. Your statement that he "sharpened" your Craftsman makes me wonder a bit. You know different chains are made a little differently and have to be sharpened differently. I had a dealer "sharpen" a chain once and it was as bad or worse than when I took it to him. Then I found an older man who was second generation in the sharpening business; chain saws, knives, pizza cutters, scissors, mower blades, and anything else with an edge on it. He showed me what the dealer did wrong, sharpened that same chain, and it would cut through oak like a hot knife through butter.