bellarmine
ArboristSite Lurker
Hello All,
I've just joined the ArboristSite to help out a friend with his Poulan saw. I've grown up mechanically inclined and good with electrical / electronic, like my Dad, enjoy tinkering with anything and everyhing. We also cut firewood for yearly heating using our (vintage?) Pioneer FarmSaw II. Thought I'd introduce myself and give others my thoughts on this tough easy-to-work-on saw.
My Dad bought our Farmsaw II new back in '86, I was just on the horizon then. Beginning in the early 90's we started heating exclusively with firewood every Winter, about 5 face chords every year, and the Farmsaw is the saw that did it, year in year out. Reliable and so easy to work on, every other saw I take apart just seems difficult in comparison, really nice logical tough design. Made by OMC, same as Johnson/Evinrude/Lawn Boy. It's a big 66cc saw, on the large side, to buy one in the same power bracket nowadays would cost you over ~$700, so in my opinion definitely worth a bit of coin to keep running. Only thing it's needed is a new electronic coil in the 2000's. Also put in a new carb kit, sprocket, Oregon bar and chain, on its 3rd bar now. Handles the 24" Oregon bar real nice, makes cutting stumps and trunks so much easier. I've taken over the wood cutting by now, I find when cold it likes to start by 3 pulls ignition on, then 3 pulls ignition OFF, then ignition on pull fires right up, every time. It's so easy to crank, easier than tiny saws because it has Automatic Decompression, even better than many STIHL saws with a manual button. We've run it on 25:1 oil mix from the beginning as that is what our 'generic' Pioneer manual says, though I hear noises that it actually uses 50:1. On occasion my Dad and I have a small argument about it, but at this point neither of us really feels like ruining a good thing and possibly wrecking it now after almost 40 years.........:^)
Attached a few photos, enjoy. I'm probably biased having grown up with it and knowing it like the back of my hand, but I would have to say it is in pretty nice shape, especially since it isn't even a shelf queen.
Hope you enjoy my ramble, anyone let me know if they'd like some info on Farmsaw repairs. Cheers!~
Bellarmine
I've just joined the ArboristSite to help out a friend with his Poulan saw. I've grown up mechanically inclined and good with electrical / electronic, like my Dad, enjoy tinkering with anything and everyhing. We also cut firewood for yearly heating using our (vintage?) Pioneer FarmSaw II. Thought I'd introduce myself and give others my thoughts on this tough easy-to-work-on saw.
My Dad bought our Farmsaw II new back in '86, I was just on the horizon then. Beginning in the early 90's we started heating exclusively with firewood every Winter, about 5 face chords every year, and the Farmsaw is the saw that did it, year in year out. Reliable and so easy to work on, every other saw I take apart just seems difficult in comparison, really nice logical tough design. Made by OMC, same as Johnson/Evinrude/Lawn Boy. It's a big 66cc saw, on the large side, to buy one in the same power bracket nowadays would cost you over ~$700, so in my opinion definitely worth a bit of coin to keep running. Only thing it's needed is a new electronic coil in the 2000's. Also put in a new carb kit, sprocket, Oregon bar and chain, on its 3rd bar now. Handles the 24" Oregon bar real nice, makes cutting stumps and trunks so much easier. I've taken over the wood cutting by now, I find when cold it likes to start by 3 pulls ignition on, then 3 pulls ignition OFF, then ignition on pull fires right up, every time. It's so easy to crank, easier than tiny saws because it has Automatic Decompression, even better than many STIHL saws with a manual button. We've run it on 25:1 oil mix from the beginning as that is what our 'generic' Pioneer manual says, though I hear noises that it actually uses 50:1. On occasion my Dad and I have a small argument about it, but at this point neither of us really feels like ruining a good thing and possibly wrecking it now after almost 40 years.........:^)
Attached a few photos, enjoy. I'm probably biased having grown up with it and knowing it like the back of my hand, but I would have to say it is in pretty nice shape, especially since it isn't even a shelf queen.
Hope you enjoy my ramble, anyone let me know if they'd like some info on Farmsaw repairs. Cheers!~
Bellarmine


