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#1
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I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out
there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! Bill |
#2
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On Sun, 13 Mar 2005 19:17:37 GMT, Bill
wrote: I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! I purchased my Stihl 028 in 1983. It has never let me down Gary. Please remove XXX in email address if email reply is desired. |
#3
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![]() Bill wrote: I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! Bill Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K |
#4
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On 13 Mar 2005 18:33:13 -0800, "Harry K"
wrote: Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K Hey Harry, My Stihl is a model 038 Farm Boss...it's a good one! You know, they say the Germans aren't making cars of the high quality they used to but they definitely know how to build a rugged chainsaw... Bill |
#5
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![]() Bill wrote: On 13 Mar 2005 18:33:13 -0800, "Harry K" wrote: Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K Hey Harry, My Stihl is a model 038 Farm Boss...it's a good one! You know, they say the Germans aren't making cars of the high quality they used to but they definitely know how to build a rugged chainsaw... Bill That's for sure. AFAIK the current Stihls are built in US, at least those being sold here. My 'big' saw is the 041. Both yours and mine go back many a year and given reasonable care will outlast us. The 041 (don't know about the 038) has a reputation for shaking bolts loose. I haven't had that problem...yet. Will be off to my woodpatch in another day or two for some cleanup and removing stumps cutting them ALAP (As Low As Possible) without cutting dirt. Harry K |
#6
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In article . com,
"Harry K" wrote: Bill wrote: On 13 Mar 2005 18:33:13 -0800, "Harry K" wrote: Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K Hey Harry, My Stihl is a model 038 Farm Boss...it's a good one! You know, they say the Germans aren't making cars of the high quality they used to but they definitely know how to build a rugged chainsaw... Bill That's for sure. AFAIK the current Stihls are built in US, at least those being sold here. My 'big' saw is the 041. Both yours and mine go back many a year and given reasonable care will outlast us. The 041 (don't know about the 038) has a reputation for shaking bolts loose. I haven't had that problem...yet. Will be off to my woodpatch in another day or two for some cleanup and removing stumps cutting them ALAP (As Low As Possible) without cutting dirt. Harry K My Stihl says something like "Made in Va Beach Va, USA" on it somewhere. Whoda thunk it? I drag it out once every few years now that we've moved away from the trees (snif). "Common wisdon" when I got my saw 13 years ago was that Stihl set the standard everyone else tried to meet. -- Dana Miller |
#7
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![]() "Harry K" wrote in message oups.com... Bill wrote: I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! Bill Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K This is Turtle They have the MS-660 [ 7.0 H.P. ] with standard Bars of 16" to 36" and a MS-880 [8.5 H.P. ] with standard bars from 21" to 41" . With Both retailing about $800.00 to $1K each. Your MS-310 with 4 H.P. which I have and like it very much. TURTLE |
#8
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![]() TURTLE wrote: "Harry K" wrote in message oups.com... Bill wrote: I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! Bill Curious here. Just what model is it? A $700 saw to cut 18" diameter trees sounds like a bunch of overkill. I run two Stihls and a Husky cutting firewood. Most expensive is the new Stihl ms310 20" bar (about $350 2003) which does 90% of the work cutting stuff from 16" through 30". Other saws used for stuff under/over that. Harry K This is Turtle They have the MS-660 [ 7.0 H.P. ] with standard Bars of 16" to 36" and a MS-880 [8.5 H.P. ] with standard bars from 21" to 41" . With Both retailing about $800.00 to $1K each. Your MS-310 with 4 H.P. which I have and like it very much. TURTLE Yes the 310 is a nice consumer grade saw. Some new design things on the new Stihls are great, others not so hot: The quick opening/closing fuel/oil caps - great. Better would have been to put the openings on a higher boss so you could wipe the crude away before opeing them. The single lever switch/choke etc. Lousy. It is almost impossible to shut the saw off with one hand. The switch operates backwards from sstandard switch design. Off is UP when almost all toggle switches have up-ON. All my other saws have had toggle switches that I could flick with one finger DOWN and the saw was off. Harry K |
#9
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On Sun, 13 Mar 2005 19:17:37 GMT, someone wrote:
filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! I like my Husky, I believe its 65cc. I have 18 inch and 24 inch bars for it. We have "pines" (really hemlock) here that you can barely get thru with a 24" bar cutting from "both sides" (does something round have "sides"?). A 14" diameter tree isn't very big in the scheme of things but will make an impressive crash for a homeowner if the tree is tall. Heck, you can cut a 14" tree from one side with a 16" bar. I also have a small arborist's Echo for limbing. Really cuts down on the fatigue factor for the small stuff and branches, and safer too (shorter bar means tip less likely to be shoved into unintended things when cutting thru leafy debris). One of our sons has a similar class Stihl and likes it alot. However none of these saws was anywhere close to $700. More like the $400 range for the biger ones. A chainsaw is one of my favorite toys, but misuse can kill you - not from the saw itself but from being crushed under limbs or whole trees. Reply to NG only - this e.mail address goes to a kill file. |
#10
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Bill wrote:
I just had to say something to all you homeowners with fireplaces out there in cyberspace. Years ago I bought an American made McCullough chainsaw to cut firewood and the piece of **** blew up after maybe ten hours of use. Eight years ago I forked out $700 for a German made Stihl chainsaw...damn near had to get a divorce over it the wife raised so much hell about me spending that much money on the chainsaw. I've pretty much had it just sitting in the closet for the last three years. I got it out yesterday to cut down three big trees. When I filled it with gas it cranked on the first pull. I cut down and sliced up three big trees that were at least 14 inch diameter at the base. Yesterday's chores alone made my Stihl Chainsaw pay for itself. I like my Stihl chainsaw! Bill In my former life I was a logger in coastal BC, there you saw only 2 saws being used, Stihl and Husky. There was the odd person used Homelites or something else but they were few & far between. Stihl was always my personal favorite, even with me being a swede & all, but the "Husky" was as good a saw. Besides, the Stihl calenders were something to behold! |
#11
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The land of the big sticks. I first started fooling around (homeowner)
back in the 50s. Then the king was gear drive Macs. Later direct drive Homelights. My first experience with a saw was as the outboard guy on a a 4' bar Mall. Took two men and a dumb boy (me) to pack that thing. Harry K |
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