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Jack Goff wrote:
snip... ELECTRIC chainsaw?!? You girlie-man... :-) Jack Girlie-man??? I live on a 40' x 100' city lot. The trees on it are too big to tackle by myself if I used a 20" gas chainsaw. (other than a bit of pruning or cutting up firewood already on the ground). Just this week we paid $500.00 + tax to have a very large Ash tree felled on our front lawn because the wife would be on pins & needles every time the wind blew. For my use this 12amp electric chainsaw is very practical and performs well. Who's the girlie-man? |
#2
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On Sat, 08 Apr 2006 14:38:08 GMT, Don White
wrote: Jack Goff wrote: snip... ELECTRIC chainsaw?!? You girlie-man... :-) Jack Girlie-man??? I live on a 40' x 100' city lot. The trees on it are too big to tackle by myself if I used a 20" gas chainsaw. (other than a bit of pruning or cutting up firewood already on the ground). Just this week we paid $500.00 + tax to have a very large Ash tree felled on our front lawn because the wife would be on pins & needles every time the wind blew. For my use this 12amp electric chainsaw is very practical and performs well. Who's the girlie-man? Pay attention to the smilie-face. :-) I understand. I used to have one of those homeowner-grade Poulan gas chainsaws. I was OK for cutting up limbs and such, but had the smaller size chain and a small motor, so it just couldn't handle bigger jobs. At the time, that was OK for my situation. I'm now on 2+ acres, and it's 80% heavily wooded. The Poulan died, so I bought a real saw... a Stihl. I've paid to have a couple of large oaks taken down that were too close to the house for me to do, but the Stihl has paid for itself on a couple of other trees I could handle myself. Jack |
#3
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Jack Goff wrote:
On Sat, 08 Apr 2006 14:38:08 GMT, Don White wrote: Jack Goff wrote: snip... ELECTRIC chainsaw?!? You girlie-man... :-) Jack Girlie-man??? I live on a 40' x 100' city lot. The trees on it are too big to tackle by myself if I used a 20" gas chainsaw. (other than a bit of pruning or cutting up firewood already on the ground). Just this week we paid $500.00 + tax to have a very large Ash tree felled on our front lawn because the wife would be on pins & needles every time the wind blew. For my use this 12amp electric chainsaw is very practical and performs well. Who's the girlie-man? Pay attention to the smilie-face. :-) I understand. I used to have one of those homeowner-grade Poulan gas chainsaws. I was OK for cutting up limbs and such, but had the smaller size chain and a small motor, so it just couldn't handle bigger jobs. At the time, that was OK for my situation. I'm now on 2+ acres, and it's 80% heavily wooded. The Poulan died, so I bought a real saw... a Stihl. I've paid to have a couple of large oaks taken down that were too close to the house for me to do, but the Stihl has paid for itself on a couple of other trees I could handle myself. Jack I had a gas saw and used it so infrequently that the gas in the carburetor gummed it up. I then bought an electric that I could store without any concern. After the hurricanes last year I am back to a gas saw but I'll have to remember to start it every month or so. I already put Stabil in my 40:1 can as soon as I fill it. Dan |
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