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Maryland Logic
On 6/25/14, 11:36 AM, Tim wrote:
Harry. I have 6 chainsaws I use. My smallest is a Stihl 0/17 with a 12" bar it's light and does a great job on limbs etc. a poulan with an 18" bar and that's the saw I use the most but odd enough it's also the saw I love to hate. Then a shendaiwa 345 w/12" . It's light and dependable but not very powerful. Then an Echo with a 20" heavy bar which is a good log saw. Now my sweetheart is the Makita (dolmar) i4000 equipped with a 24" roller bar . It s a great all around saw. I use it and the poulan "wood shark" the most. But I also have a man eating Stihl 051AV from the mid- 70's. It's got the 33" roller tip bar and I use it to slice up fallen oaks up to 5 ft. in diameter. I look at chainsaws like I do my firearms and credit cards. Use them if you need to, but give them respect. I'm the same way with my one and only chainsaw...cautious and respectful, and I really think about cuts before I make them. -- If right-wing assholes could fly, rec.boats would be an airport! |
Maryland Logic
On 6/25/14, 11:50 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 25 Jun 2014 06:07:40 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote: On 6/24/14, 10:34 PM, wrote: They are just a lot easier if you are just cutting a few limbs. No gas problems. (mixing fresh, using it all or dumping it etc) I keep about a quart of gas/oil mixed for my string trimmer, which I use at least once a week. Same mix goes into the chain saw. Stays fresh enough, or at least it's never given me a problem. When I am finished with the chain saw, I empty the mix out back into the little container and run the saw dry. I use the chain saw about once a month for cutting limbs too big for the Sawz-all. We have electric tools for all of that. I only break out the gas saw or trimmer when I am getting serious about something like cutting the weeds at the boat basin or cutting down big trees. Other than that the electric chain saw and electric trimmer works fine. My wife will use them ;-) It's 100 feet or more from exterior house/garage electrical outlets to many of the places where I need to trim a limb or cut up a fallen tree. I have a 100' drop cord, but at those distances, I prefer gasoline power for yard tools. -- If right-wing assholes could fly, rec.boats would be an airport! |
Maryland Logic
On 6/25/2014 11:41 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 6/25/14, 11:36 AM, Tim wrote: Harry. I have 6 chainsaws I use. My smallest is a Stihl 0/17 with a 12" bar it's light and does a great job on limbs etc. a poulan with an 18" bar and that's the saw I use the most but odd enough it's also the saw I love to hate. Then a shendaiwa 345 w/12" . It's light and dependable but not very powerful. Then an Echo with a 20" heavy bar which is a good log saw. Now my sweetheart is the Makita (dolmar) i4000 equipped with a 24" roller bar . It s a great all around saw. I use it and the poulan "wood shark" the most. But I also have a man eating Stihl 051AV from the mid- 70's. It's got the 33" roller tip bar and I use it to slice up fallen oaks up to 5 ft. in diameter. I look at chainsaws like I do my firearms and credit cards. Use them if you need to, but give them respect. I'm the same way with my one and only chainsaw...cautious and respectful, and I really think about cuts before I make them. I didn't think you were respectful of anything that wasn't liberal in nature. -- "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them". Thomas Jefferson |
Maryland Logic
On 6/25/2014 11:54 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 6/25/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Wed, 25 Jun 2014 06:07:40 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote: On 6/24/14, 10:34 PM, wrote: They are just a lot easier if you are just cutting a few limbs. No gas problems. (mixing fresh, using it all or dumping it etc) I keep about a quart of gas/oil mixed for my string trimmer, which I use at least once a week. Same mix goes into the chain saw. Stays fresh enough, or at least it's never given me a problem. When I am finished with the chain saw, I empty the mix out back into the little container and run the saw dry. I use the chain saw about once a month for cutting limbs too big for the Sawz-all. We have electric tools for all of that. I only break out the gas saw or trimmer when I am getting serious about something like cutting the weeds at the boat basin or cutting down big trees. Other than that the electric chain saw and electric trimmer works fine. My wife will use them ;-) It's 100 feet or more from exterior house/garage electrical outlets to many of the places where I need to trim a limb or cut up a fallen tree. I have a 100' drop cord, but at those distances, I prefer gasoline power for yard tools. My gawd you're right. It would be unthinkable to bend the rules and hook two extension cords together. -- "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them". Thomas Jefferson |
Maryland Logic
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Maryland Logic
On 6/25/14, 6:54 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 25 Jun 2014 11:54:46 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote: On 6/25/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: We have electric tools for all of that. I only break out the gas saw or trimmer when I am getting serious about something like cutting the weeds at the boat basin or cutting down big trees. Other than that the electric chain saw and electric trimmer works fine. My wife will use them ;-) It's 100 feet or more from exterior house/garage electrical outlets to many of the places where I need to trim a limb or cut up a fallen tree. I have a 100' drop cord, but at those distances, I prefer gasoline power for yard tools. You need more outlets ;-) It would be nice, but very expensive to put power out there. Probably cheaper to buy a portable Honda generator. Not probably...absolutely. -- If right-wing assholes could fly, rec.boats would be an airport! |
Maryland Logic
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Maryland Logic
On 6/25/2014 6:53 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 25 Jun 2014 11:45:04 -0400, Poquito Loco wrote: On Tue, 24 Jun 2014 23:04:17 -0400, wrote: Yup but when you are filling a 30 yd dumpster you need gas http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Hort%20dumpster%20full.jpg Why? My Makita does a great job up to 10" that I know of. I haven't hit anything bigger yet, but I could probably do it in a couple whacks. It seems about as fast as the gas, and it's a hell of a lot easier to start! The trunks of that tree were almost 2' across. I had to take 2 swings at it with a 16" saw. The gas also goes faster. I was dragging the small logs with the golf cart but I needed my truck for the big ones. I rigged a 3/8" steel cable over the end of the dumpster and dragged the logs in with the truck. Did you need to get a permit to take down that big tree? -- "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them". Thomas Jefferson |
Maryland Logic
I have 2 of Costco's 12 ga 50 foot cords for outdoor use.
I use them for my electric chain saw and my electric snowthrower etc. |
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