jerseyjeff
ArboristSite Member
well, I am in NJ, and for those folks following the news, Sandy handed us our tails, and spanked us good. I have a small property but, the owners prior were hobby landscapers, and I have a ton of trees. Nothing too big, nothing too hard. During the noreaster of last october, I lost a tree and set about chopping it up with a worx electric saw. Dumb move on my part, so, after a ton of research I picked up a redmax 4500 with an 18 inch bar, some labonville chaps, and was happy, the saw is light, cuts like an angry beaver, and is well behaved.
Fast foward to this hurricane.
I lost a few big branches, but the trees held firm, and I was able to clean up the lot in about 1/2 a day, then, I looked around and saw the mayan apoocalypse, huge trees down wires down, cars crushed, cars skewered, houses crushed, garages crushed, garages crushed with cars crushed inside. Bad. Really bad.
So, the town was overwhelmed and it fell on the local homeowners to open up the roads, and start the clearing process. I set to work on a big hunk of oak that had blocked the road (20-22 inch diameter) I was able to limb it quickly, but it took a good long while for me to cut the bigger hunk into sections so we could wrestle it off the road. My neighbor was working on clearing other intersections and he was armed with a 14 inch stihl (climbing saw) and 20 inch echo and had pretty good luck.
Now I am wondering if I should pick a bigger saw, and a quick scan of craigslist has me looking at an 029 super with a 20 inch bar for 275, or an ms 310 for 400... Or I can wait till homecreapo unloads their next batch of Makita/dolmars, and put a big bore kit into it...
The big question for the masses, is, and will be is a used 029 super that much more of a saw? should I hold out for the makita?
Jeff
Fast foward to this hurricane.
I lost a few big branches, but the trees held firm, and I was able to clean up the lot in about 1/2 a day, then, I looked around and saw the mayan apoocalypse, huge trees down wires down, cars crushed, cars skewered, houses crushed, garages crushed, garages crushed with cars crushed inside. Bad. Really bad.
So, the town was overwhelmed and it fell on the local homeowners to open up the roads, and start the clearing process. I set to work on a big hunk of oak that had blocked the road (20-22 inch diameter) I was able to limb it quickly, but it took a good long while for me to cut the bigger hunk into sections so we could wrestle it off the road. My neighbor was working on clearing other intersections and he was armed with a 14 inch stihl (climbing saw) and 20 inch echo and had pretty good luck.
Now I am wondering if I should pick a bigger saw, and a quick scan of craigslist has me looking at an 029 super with a 20 inch bar for 275, or an ms 310 for 400... Or I can wait till homecreapo unloads their next batch of Makita/dolmars, and put a big bore kit into it...
The big question for the masses, is, and will be is a used 029 super that much more of a saw? should I hold out for the makita?
Jeff