Ahh, another Brand Color Debate! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
I have a Stihl 046. I've gotten a couple of hundred hours of use in it easy. And I do mean running hours. The only problem I have had with it is I had to change the spark plug a few months back and I fed it bad fuel. I thought the fuel was good but I think too much of the good stuff had evaporated and left me a bad fuel/oil mix. The saw tried to start and died. Had to replace the spark plug. I had put at least twice the number of hours than was recommended but it kept starting so why put in a new plug? /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif After the bad fuel that plug was a gunky mess.
I have cut itty bitty little stuff with the 046 and trees up to 24-26 inches in diameter without a problem. Keep the thing fuel, oiled, and sharp chain is all the 046 asks... Its a heavy beast that can kick my butt but put it on a big oak log with a sharp chain and it just goes...
I looked at buying a second chainaw, one that was lighter than the 046 but I can go from cutting a 1 inch sapling that is in the way to working through a 24+ inch log. So I just figure I'm burning more calories and building up muscles! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
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I also have a Stihl FS 80 or 85 edger/brush cutter. I have abused that thing. I have cut lots of trees up to 3-4 inches in diameter with this thing. In the last 16 months I have use the chain saw and brush cutter to cut the saplings from a road a good 1,600 feet long. Say six feet on both sides of the road for 1,600 feet. A minimum of 16,000 square feet of densly packed saplings. Course the FS gets used as a simple weed wacker at the house.
The logger that timbered my property used Stihl as well. I don't think you can go wrong with a Stihl or Husky. I personally don't like the cheaper saws. My neighbor had a Poulan or some such. He bought two of them new. What he has cut with two saws would be a very small percentage of what I have cut with one Stihl. And he has two of his adult boys to help him. His saws just are not as productive as the Stihl. His saws are falling apart and I think are just flat out dangerous.
I do wear safety chaps, boots, gloves, eye protect and a helmet with a face shield as well as ear protection. These things are cheap compared with even a little accident, if such a thing exsists with a chainsaw. The cost of a couple of stitches ain't gonna come close to what a good set of safety equipment costs. I think the helmet was about 50 dollars and the chaps 50-75. Pretty cheap insurance. Hot as all heck but I'll take the heat.
The difference between the professional and other Stihl chainsaws starts somewhere around 044 or 046 saws. Sthil makes the 046, I think an 048 and a monstrous other model which I can't remember. Its for cutting down huge redwood monster trees.
Hope this helps...
Dan WhoWillBeUsingThe046EarlySaturdayBeforeItGetsRealHot McCarty