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

Best Gas Chainsaw for the Money


  • Total voters
    15
  • Poll closed .
I don't know what Mr A does to chainsaws but we have several dead ones and one red one that barely stays cranked. He cusses it a lot. I told him that if he talked nicer to it, it might work better but he won't listen to me. We borrowed our neighbor's chainsaw when we had trees come down during the hurricane in September and it was as screwy as ours. It was also red but it was smaller than ours and also "a fuuuuuccckkkk, fuuuuuccckkk, fuuuccckkking whore", lol.

I might try to buy him a new chainsaw for Christmas. I'll just go to the store and ask for the one that's not a fucking whore.

I bought my husband a good Stihl about 20 years ago. He used it once. I asked him to use it again 2 years ago when a tree came down in the back yard. He took it apart and lost some of the pieces. Last year the neighbor asked if he could cut the the down tree for firewood.

FML.
 
I'm buying Mr A an electric chainsaw (red) and a bunch of extension cords for Christmas.
 
I don't know what Mr A does to chainsaws but we have several dead ones and one red one that barely stays cranked. He cusses it a lot. I told him that if he talked nicer to it, it might work better but he won't listen to me. We borrowed our neighbor's chainsaw when we had trees come down during the hurricane in September and it was as screwy as ours. It was also red but it was smaller than ours and also "a fuuuuuccckkkk, fuuuuuccckkk, fuuuccckkking whore", lol.

I might try to buy him a new chainsaw for Christmas. I'll just go to the store and ask for the one that's not a $#@!ing whore.

I know what brand it is.

It is a Craftsman, made by Poulan.

Its best use is to tie to things that you don't want to be able to swim.
 
Last edited:
You can buy "Stihl MS 261 C-M" Pole Saw

Engine Size: 50.5 cc

Price: $550
Engine weight: 10.8 lb


The Stihl might be a pound heavier and an inch longer than the competition, but it's a good, torque-rich saw that bites in and stays with the cut, no matter how tough it gets. Part of the reason for that is the saw makes its full horsepower (4.0 hp) at a couple hundred lower rpm than the other saws, so it's not working as hard.

This saw features the new STIHL M-Tronic onboard microprocessor, which digitally monitors and automatically compensates for changes in your work conditions including elevation, temperature, fuel quality, and dirty air filters. Say goodbye to manual adjustments.
 
Last edited:
I bought my husband a good Stihl about 20 years ago. He used it once. I asked him to use it again 2 years ago when a tree came down in the back yard. He took it apart and lost some of the pieces. Last year the neighbor asked if he could cut the the down tree for firewood.

FML.

I have to buy my own saws.
 
It just doesn't seem right that David Bradley would have to fall under the category of "all others".

A truly innovative brand available at every Sears nationwide.

All you need is a time machine to get one now.

 
A few years ago, my neighbor helped me cut up a fallen tree in my yard and he used his grandfather's old Homelite XL.

A lone Homelite XL running in the woods is a beautiful sound.
 
I have a pair of Stihl MS260 Pro's.

Love 'em. No problems sans regular service 15+ years. Can't tell you how many chains I've put through them. They've easily seen a hundred cord.

I always run ethanol free fuel; 91 octane and Stihl brand 50:1 mix.

New about $550 at the dealer (I think the 260 Pro is now called the 261); you can usually find them used around $250 on craigslist; I dickered a rookie pawn shop clerk down to $100 for one of mine.


For heating your home and tending your homestead I'd recommend anything from Stihl in the MS250 to MS290 range. Anything bigger than that gets needlessly heavy for homeowner work and anything less will slow you down when you have a day's worth of making rounds for winter ahead of you.
 
Stihl MS193t arborist with a 14" bar for limbing and top work

Stihl MS310 with a 20" bar for bigger stuff

I purchased both saws new (about 15 years apart), and have been impressed with the engineering and power of both types.

The 193t I can use for 8-10 hours straight - not a problem. The MS310 will hurt me after only 3-5 hours. Its probably more to do with the scale of the work than the size of the saw. Regardless, the 193 is deceptively easy to use due to its size and weight, but considerable more dangerous IMO than the 310 for those very reasons. I've had to consciously stop myself from making a 1 handed (reaching) cut - I can see how someone with less discipline could "get too familiar", if you know what I mean, and end up buzzing their face or jugular.

If you're in the market for a saw, and possibly new to using them, some education might go a long way - there's some good arborist training videos on youtube. Learning about compression, tension, barber chairs, hinge cuts, humboldts, kickback, the various cutting zones/types, chain brake, etc is time well spent, IMO.

While chainsaws are super useful, they are sure to become "darwinian acceleration devices" when unleashed upon operators who dont have sufficient respect or proper knowledge of their operation and use. Just my 2 cents - to keep in mind for lending to neighbors too.

Be safe...
 
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.

I have an old Stihl 041. It is a beast.

Also have Husqvarna 455. Very good saw.

Also a Stihl MS 250. Good running, but some parts a bit delicate. I broke the nib off the fuel tank to which the hose attaches. New tank is $100+. I put in a grommet and a new, longer line and we're basically good.

The older saws are a handful to heft all day, but they last eternally and are very powerful compared with their modern equivalents. At least that has been my experience.
 
  • 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.

Like Phill mentioned, the MS 290 Farm Boss Stihl is about the very best "mid range" saw that has ever been made. I have had two, my dad has one, my brother has one, my buddy the G/C has one, and they are, for the money, the very best out there. The engine will easily drive a 20 inch bar, which means it will handle all but the largest trees, but is still balanced nicely so it won't kill you after a day of using it, or become unsafe by being too light or too heavy.

It is truely the very best in that range.

Which, of course, means it has been discontinued. :mad:

https://www.stihlusa.com/products/ms-290-discontinued/

In it's place is a fucking computerized "upgrade", the MS291.

I have no experience with these so I have no idea of how well the work, how powerful they are, or their long term reliability.
 
Yeah but who dresses you when you go out of the house?

Me...why?

pink-assless-chaps.jpg
 
[MENTION=38380]Suzanimal[/MENTION]

Also, Stihl makes a brand of chain marked with yellow links.

They do not comply with Uncle Sucker's safety kickback standards, (yeah Uncle regulates chain saw chains) so they are covered with scary warnings of spontaneous decapitation if you use them.

The fact of the matter is that they are essentially what you would have for a chain from 1970 or or so.

Which means it cuts wood as slick as whale shit through an ice flow.

That reduces wear and tear on the saw, decreases fuel consumption and eliminates overheating of both the saw and the bar.

https://www.stihlusa.com/products/chain-saws/saw-chains/rslk/
 
Andreas Stihl AG & Company KG is a German manufacturer of chainsaws and other handheld power equipment including trimmers and blowers. Their headquarters are in Waiblingen, Baden-Württemberg near Stuttgart, Germany. Stihl was founded in 1926 by Andreas Stihl, an important innovator in early chainsaw production.


Bar length is one way to judge a saw's size and the work it can handle. A saw with a longer bar can cut larger-diameter wood in a single pass. Bar lengths for most homeowner saws range from 6 inches on smaller electric saws to 20 inches on larger, gasoline-powered models.
 
Andreas Stihl AG & Company KG is a German manufacturer of chainsaws and other handheld power equipment including trimmers and blowers. Their headquarters are in Waiblingen, Baden-Württemberg near Stuttgart, Germany. Stihl was founded in 1926 by Andreas Stihl, an important innovator in early chainsaw production.


Bar length is one way to judge a saw's size and the work it can handle. A saw with a longer bar can cut larger-diameter wood in a single pass. Bar lengths for most homeowner saws range from 6 inches on smaller electric saws to 20 inches on larger, gasoline-powered models.

I have an electric knife longer than that. o_O
 
Back
Top