Chris-PA
Where the Wild Things Are
First off, in spite of the homely color scheme, this is not a copy of any Sthil product nor does it have the name Stihl on it. It is a straightforward clone of a 62cc Zenoah/RedMax G621AV.
I picked it up for a couple of reasons: First, I wanted a project saw that was bigger than the 40cc saws I've been playing with lately. Second, I've like the Zenoah G621 for some time, but they don't come up often and they usually go for more than I think they are worth (and more than I can justify). Third, I have read all the fuss about Chinese clones, and wanted to see for myself – my other data point is the Earthquake. Last, the G621 shares bars and chains with my McCinderblock and I have some spares. So that is the justification. It was $210 to my door.
My initial impressions were not too favorable. I figured the castings would be aluminum, that it would have lots of molding flash on the plastic parts, casting flash on the aluminum and probably indifferent assembly quality. I planned to tear it down before even running it. However, it was obvious that something was misaligned in regard to the air filter housing (I forgot to take a picture of it), as the bolt didn't line up with the hole in the cover, and the whole cover was shifted over to the clutch side when installed by almost 1/4”. I tried messing with the A/V bushings, but that was not the problem. There were cracked and bent fins on the top of the jug – not a functional problem but ugly.
Also, the bar was awful, with rivets that were not flattened and the sprocket tip was not aligned with the bar. The “tools” provided would be better termed “litter” if you saw them lying about.
To top it off they didn't even step up to the good TriLink chain, rather some awful looking “DOKIO” stuff. Still, I expected a project and figured I'd make of it what I could. Cutters are not even close to the same length on each side.
One of the first things I did to it was to spend an evening with an X-acto knife cleaning up the plastic parts. Simple and easy work, kind of like building model cars when I was a kid. It looked better after that. Then I took it to work to weigh it on the digital shipping scale, and got 12.4lb (12lb, 6oz.), which was considerably lighter than I expected. So that was a pleasant surprise.