I can and then get the Stihl Arborists saw crushed by a bucket truck, was a quick 700 clams. Why I bought the Echo CS. Half the price and just as good and lighter. Not about to spend another 700. Didn't tell the wife, just did it.Iāve never paid that much but depends on what you need to do with it, Or what you need it to do, I guess.
My wife canāt understand why I spent $630 on a chain saw - āespecially when you already have one.ā
It's a dang good saw too. Put it to the test last week. Light as a feather and runs very well. Echo's are all made in Japan and exude Japanese quality. The Stihl retails for around 700 btw.Considering how much it costs just to fill up a full size vehicle vs $350 for the Echo 12" arborist saw, the saw looks pretty inexpensive.
Be careful with hot starts and don't use the primer bulb, just the choke. The primer bulb on a hot start will flood it, found that out the hard way and grease the roller nose (it is greaseable), but then the Stihl top handle arborists saw does the same thing\ for a lot more money.I bought one yesterday hoping that I won't be as worn out using a lighter saw and also suspecting that the day is coming when 2 strokes will be hard to come by. For one thing, the box store retailers are pushing battery powered saws. I get them being easier for occasional users in confined residential areas not having to deal with oil/gas and noise, but I suspect battery powered equipment is more profitable to sell and more repeat business is to be had from selling batteries and replacement electric saws. I don't see battery powered units having the lifespan, performance or economy of this Echo arborist saw.
Be careful with hot starts and don't use the primer bulb, just the choke. The primer bulb on a hot start will flood it, found that out the hard way and grease the roller nose (it is greaseable), but then the Stihl top handle arborists saw does the same thing\ for a lot more money.
My view of battery powered chainsaws are, they are for the wokesters and I'm not one of them.
I got a couple of little battery saws for limbing and like them. Makita brand tiny little things. Easy to carry into the field and super light in weight. Not HD work.I bought a battery saw for the primary reason that I can keep it in the vehicle cab without smelling like gas. Iām not going to be throwing away my gas saws anytime soon but I can definitely see the advantage for a homeowner thatās just going to use it a few minutes a year for storm cleanup.
I donāt mind telling her. She will find out anyway and sometimes, she adds value to the discussion.I can and then get the Stihl Arborists saw crushed by a bucket truck, was a quick 700 clams. Why I bought the Echo CS. Half the price and just as good and lighter. Not about to spend another 700. Didn't tell the wife, just did it.
What model(s) are you talking about, @5030? I've owned Echo, and they make some reliable saws at lower price points, but they had a lower power to weight ratio, and they had some other odd quirks that really affected usability in some situations. On power, even my oldest Stihl (now pushing 40 years) has a better power to weight ratio than anything I've ever seen from Echo, which really matters when you're swinging the thing all day.Why I bought the Echo CS. Half the price and just as good and lighter.