Which is the Best Brand Gas Operated Chainsaw for the Money?

Best Gas Chainsaw for the Money


  • Total voters
    15
  • Poll closed .

Cap

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2007
Messages
3,177
Oyarde bought a new chainsaw and asked those of us who are cutting wood, what we were using. The manliest of men weighed in and offered opinions. But there was no poll, so I created a thread with a poll. Mods, if you can merge the two and include the poll, it would be cool.
 
Last edited:
My dad had a Stihl for at least 20 years and all I ever remember him doing to it was putting gas in it and sharpening the blade.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cap
I voted for both Echo and Stihl...

Bottom line is given modern manufacturing any "professional" grade saw is going to give good service...
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cap
I'm very interested in this thread. We seem to be chainsaw killers, they usually only last about a year and I'm not sure if we're just buying crappy chainsaws, if we're (and by "we", I mean my husband) doing something to them or a combination of both. (I need to read more about that gas issue.) Our current chainsaw is a red one, it's a piece of shit, I don't recommend it and our last chainsaw was a lime green one, much prettier than the red one (I picked it out) but it didn't last very long either.

The red one requires lots of cussing and cord yanking to get it cranked and if he turns it off (sometimes I think it just shuts off on it's own) it needs to "rest" about an hour before he can start the cussing-cord pulling ritual again. I told him to try talking nice to it but he doesn't listen to me, he just asks the "peanut gallery"(that's me:)) to pipe down. The lime green one was even worse, he got frustrated and threw that one.


One thing I can recommend is an electric chain sharpener. I bought my husband one for Fathers Day last year, he said he didn't want it but I just thought it was one of those times "no" meant "yes". In reality, "no" actually meant "no" and he was kinda irritated I bought it but it turns out he loves it, it's our most popular tool with the neighbors. Men come from as far as five houses away to drink our beer and sharpen their chains on our neat little gadget. If you're interested, I bought it at Harbor Freight for $20.00, it was on sale. It looks like the price has gone up on it, it's 39.99 now but with a coupon, it's 29.99. Here's a link to the coupon http://www.harborfreight.com/oct-tab1.html. I'm not sure about shipping, we have a store near us.
 

Attachments

  • BC9odPC.jpg
    BC9odPC.jpg
    143.6 KB · Views: 0
  • BC9odPCs.jpg
    BC9odPCs.jpg
    6.3 KB · Views: 0
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Cap
Of all the chain saws I have owned my Stihl "Farm Boss" has been the best one. Hands down. For Suzanimal that would be the orange and white one. :p
 
Suzanimal,

Go to your local saw shop and talk to the guys in the service department (not sales!)

It's very unlikely that you'll find a "professional" grade saw under $250.00 for a small saw, one that'll take a 24"-36" bar is going to be north of $650.00
 
Of all the chain saws I have owned my Stihl "Farm Boss" has been the best one. Hands down. For Suzanimal that would be the orange and white one. :p

Yay! A new color scheme for our shed.

Suzanimal,

Go to your local saw shop and talk to the guys in the service department (not sales!)

It's very unlikely that you'll find a "professional" grade saw under $250.00 for a small saw, one that'll take a 24"-36" bar is going to be north of $650.00

Yeah, we've been buying them at The Home Depot. I think we should just spend the money and get something decent, in the long run it'll probably be cheaper.
 
Yeah, we've been buying them at The Home Depot. I think we should just spend the money and get something decent, in the long run it'll probably be cheaper.

As to the fuel situation...

I got in the habit of dumping the gas when I was done cutting when they went to unleaded....

I just pour it back into my 2-stroke jug then run the carb dry....

If I don't empty the storage container in a month I use it to burn brush...(well sometimes 2-3 months):o
 
Suze, you made a very good point regarding the chain sharpener. Thanks.

Yeah, he loves the thing. I saw it in an ad and asked him if he wanted it and he was like no, it's not a big deal to sharpen a chain, blah, blah, blah. So of course, I figured it would be the perfect gift.:o I kinda felt bad because he was so excited to actually get a gift from me (I rarely buy him gifts:o) and he opened it and was like, "What the fuck is wrong with you? The one time you actually get me something, it's exactly what I told you I didn't want." He was so disappointed, it was kinda sad. He set it up out of spite(he was trying to show me what a piece of junk it is) and he ended up loving it but because he was so mean to me when he opened it (he really went off on me:() I make him tell me I was right every time he uses it:D. Sometimes he tries to say, "You are white" but I don't let him get away with it, he has to say the "R" and it kills him.

He says the chain sharpener makes the chain feel like almost new, says it does a much nicer job than he could do with a file.
 
Suze, you made a very good point regarding the chain sharpener. Thanks.
Yeah , I probably should have bought one yrs ago . My local bait & tackle guy down the road does it for $5 cash , I have taken him three this past season. bought one new chain , maybe three years ago too . I probably have a half dozen hanging in the outbuildings that just need sharpened , not mine originally , but I inherited them , some of them from my Father & Grandfather , some came with this place.
 
Yeah, we've been buying them at The Home Depot. I think we should just spend the money and get something decent, in the long run it'll probably be cheaper.

As the old saying goes, you get what you pay for. When it comes to tools that are going to take a lot of hard use, I've never had much luck with buying stuff from either Home Depot or Lowes... no offense to anyone who works at either place. Just sayin'.... :)
 
Best for the money??

Never had a Stihl. though I have heard good. the price is high.

I have been using Poulan Pro (18).. And overworking them..but they work for me. They are designed as light to medium duty.. and are about $150.oo

btw,, Husqvarna owns and produces Poulan, Jonsered, McCulloch (and Weed Eater)

I sharpen my own chains often,, with a file. Have gotten rather good at it.
 
Yay! A new color scheme for our shed.



Yeah, we've been buying them at The Home Depot. I think we should just spend the money and get something decent, in the long run it'll probably be cheaper.

FWIW, my Home Depot ryobi chainsaw has lasted me a few years and I've never had any problems - we took down a whole tree with it. I don't know if they carry them anymore though. Believe mine cost ~$175. Maybe I got lucky :)
 
FWIW, my Home Depot ryobi chainsaw has lasted me a few years and I've never had any problems - we took down a whole tree with it. I don't know if they carry them anymore though. Believe mine cost ~$175. Maybe I got lucky :)

:eek:That's the lime green saw we had!

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Ryobi-18-in-2-Cycle-46-cc-Gas-Chainsaw-RY10519/202521219

I read the reviews to see if we were the only people who had trouble with it and one guy had some really good advice for saw maintenance. I think I'm going have the husband tinker with the crappy red saw and see if we can squeeze another year out of it. He cuts down about 5 big trees a year and I'm not sure if he's working them too hard or if he's just not taking care of them.:confused: Either way, we have to do something because the saw drama is really getting absurd.
 
My nephew used to work as a mechanic at a chainsaw, etc shop and now owns the business and his favorite is Husqvarna, followed closely by Stihl.

My brother and I both own Stihls. I used to own a poulan, but that thing was a total lemon for me from day one.
 
The old Mac 70's were the shit way back when...

Now Mac is China shit running on the name...

Parts availability locally is worth more than can be said!

Yep.Have a Stihl chainsaw and two Stihl weedeaters mostly because the nearby Lawn and Garden shop was a dealer.
He was more than twice as close and about 10 stoplights less than the nearest Lowe's or Home Depot.

He went out of business a few years ago though. :(
 
Just be careful. This guy was lucky: http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/01/us/chainsaw-accident-survivor/

The calendar said March, but Monday clearly was Valentine's day -- James Valentine, to be specific -- when the 21-year-old Pennsylvania man survived a work accident that sent the razor-sharp teeth of a chainsaw blade deep into his neck and shoulder, and barely a centimeter from a vital artery.
Thanks to quick but cautious work by his colleagues and medical responders, 30 stitches and an hour of surgery, a day after the accident Valentine was recovering in stable condition at a Pennsylvania hospital.

"He looks more like himself, he's walking and talking today," Valentine's sister, Becca, told CNN on Tuesday. "We can't believe it at all."

140401211552-chainsaw-xray-story-body.jpg


Pennsylvania man James Valentine, 21, cut it close after a chainsaw blade entered his neck missing a vital artery by a mere centimeter, according to a doctor Tuesday.
Valentine was on his job with Adler Tree Service in Gibsonia, north of Pittsburgh, and was performing maintenance work on a pine tree when the chainsaw "kicked back," Becca Valentine said.

The blade sawed into flesh instead of wood. Valentine's co-workers were able to detach the blade from its motor, but they left the blade and chain where it was -- in Valentine, about a quarter of an inch from the carotid artery that supplies blood to the head -- and they held the blade in place until emergency responders arrived.
On the ambulance ride to Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, Valentine was awake and alert, according to hospital spokeswoman Jennifer Davis.

The hospital's director of trauma, Dr. Christine Toevs, said the trauma unit had 10 minutes to prepare -- to get ready for a man coming up with a chainsaw blade in his neck.

"We prepare for the worst. The unit expects the injuries to be catastrophic," she said of trauma work in general.

Toevs said this kind of injury could usually cause major damage or sever the spinal cord, esophagus, or the airway. Instead, Valentine sustained most of his injuries to muscles and soft tissue around the shoulder, rather than his neck.

After Valentine was stabilized and anesthetized, doctors removed the blade. There was no major blood loss; the blade had missed that vital carotid artery by a mere centimeter, Toevs said.
 
Back
Top