beenthere
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2001
- Messages
- 18,532
- Location
- Southern Wisconsin, USA
- Tractor
- JD_4x2_Gator, JD_4300, JD_425, JD_455 AWS, added JD_455, JD_110, JD_X485(sold)
Art summed it up quite well, along with the other comments. I spent all my career working a lot with loggers in all parts of the country. Stihl is one of the brands that has been on top, along with some other good brands. I have had a Stihl for over 27 years, and albeit logging is not my profession, I have put in many hours proudly working with the Stihl. It never has missed a beat. If it ever hic-cups, I will buy another Stihl in a heartbeat. But it has been like the rabbit that keeps going and going and going.
But remember, that even the best chain saw needs to be treated with respect, with care, and with love. Heed the safety suggestions, and get some chainsaw safety training (and clothing) as well. I thought I knew everything about chainsaws for the first 10 years of using one. Then I attended a safety course on the use of chainsaws, and found out I didn't know very much, but had been real lucky up 'til then.
The words of the instructor that stick with me the most were "Its not a matter of 'if' you will have an accident with a chainsaw, but only a matter of 'when'." I try to keep thinking about those words every time I pick up my saw. Recently I was laughed at (mildly, and in a kidding way) by a fellow Lion when we were on a brush cutting project for the local school outdoor forestry center, about wearing my safety chaps. In the course of cutting, a stub caused the saw to kick back only a little bit with the bar/chain lightly bouncing off my knee. The chaps were cut and some kevlar wound up into the chain, but my kneecap was okay. The one kidding me said immediately that he was buying chaps before the day was over. He has worn them ever since, and advocates others wearing them too.
But remember, that even the best chain saw needs to be treated with respect, with care, and with love. Heed the safety suggestions, and get some chainsaw safety training (and clothing) as well. I thought I knew everything about chainsaws for the first 10 years of using one. Then I attended a safety course on the use of chainsaws, and found out I didn't know very much, but had been real lucky up 'til then.
The words of the instructor that stick with me the most were "Its not a matter of 'if' you will have an accident with a chainsaw, but only a matter of 'when'." I try to keep thinking about those words every time I pick up my saw. Recently I was laughed at (mildly, and in a kidding way) by a fellow Lion when we were on a brush cutting project for the local school outdoor forestry center, about wearing my safety chaps. In the course of cutting, a stub caused the saw to kick back only a little bit with the bar/chain lightly bouncing off my knee. The chaps were cut and some kevlar wound up into the chain, but my kneecap was okay. The one kidding me said immediately that he was buying chaps before the day was over. He has worn them ever since, and advocates others wearing them too.