You won't want to hear this then, you Fiskars fanboys, so move along to the next. :cool2:
Disclaimer: I have no financial involvement with any tool-maker, whatsoever.
This weekend I happened to compare, side-by-side, Fiskars X27, Mueller 3kg maul, and cheapie 5 & 8 lb mauls that I had modified w/disk grinder to emulate Mueller's head shape (flat face with minimal convexity.)
Conclusion: in the northern red oak and norway maple rounds, there was little performance difference, except that the Mueller and the 5 lb were more probable to get it done in one swing. Mind you we're not talking about big-box blunt metal objects, but wood-splitting tools. The Mueller had not been sharpened since new a year back, nor had the cheapies, which were modified at that time.
Other than the Fiskars, the edges were essentially as last done (from foundry or disk grinder.) No visible damage or deformation.
The edge on the Fiskars, after a few days splitting, was a mess- both brittle and plastic deformation. Unbelievable. Any knowledgeable person would have to conclude that their metallurgy was unsat. Junk, IMHO.
The Fiskars fanboy thing, I simply cannot fathom. There's no justification. Relatively speaking the $155 I spent for the Mueller is a big-time bargain. As things go, it'll probably be an heirloom. I'm dead serious here. Their metallurgy is far and away superior to Fiskars, as is that of the cheapie big-box mauls tested here. Surprised me there.
Anyone wanting to save a few bucks might well consider mauls from Wetterlings or Husqvarna from Baileys. Stihl apparently now sells Ochsenkopf- good bargain too. They are literally orders of magnitude better tools than Fiskars. Gransfors at ~$180 would be a much better value, for someone who's going to be splitting wood for some years.
Rant/flame as you wish, but when the Emperor has no clothes, he's NEKKID. :msp_ohmy: