max2cam
ArboristSite Guru
What saw do you personally like best and feel is a good combination of power, weight, reliability, balance, value, ease of maintenance, etc. for sustained firewood cutting?
I have 3 saws that could fall into the firewood catagory: Stihl 024, Jonsered 2050, and an Echo CS-510.
For me the Echo CS-510 is without doubt the best firewood cutting saw that I own. The 024 makes a great limbing and construction saw and it is smooth running and reliable, but it isn't quite powerful enough out in the woods.
Too bad it's not an 026.
The Jons. 2050 is def. a consumer-quality saw and feels sort of cheap and prone to failure (which it has in several places). Power is okay, but the wimpy oiler SUCKS and it tends to kickback on starting. The snap-on air cleaner should be called a "fall-off" air cleaner instead.
I guess they ditched the 2050. If so, no great loss.
The Echo CS-510 has the power, the smoothness, easy-starting, high build-quality, and easy maintenance. Not sure if it's considered a "pro" saw but it's way ahead of the Jons. 2050 in quality and about like the Stihl. I find myself using the Echo more and more over the Jonsered.
Would be great to try out a Husky 246xp & 353, the Solo 651, or a 50cc Redmax, Shindaiwa, or Dolmar.
Also have my old Jons. 451 which was a good saw and I should try to rebuild it.
Cutting in my black ash swamp the past week or more. Cut a trail thru swamp so I can sled wood out with my black poly tobaggon. Had just enough snow and overnight we got LOTS more. Snowing like heck right now. Deer eating my white cedars near house.
Black ash swamp is an eerie place and feels sort of like you are cutting in a graveyard as the trees have weird creepy shapes. Some standing dead and fallen stuff that tends not to rot. Split the chunks up right in the frozen swamp with a Sotz Monster and then sled them out to the road where I pile it up and will haul it to my woodpile come spring.
Ash swamp peters out in a big open brushy peat filled extinct lake basin thru which a creek runs and joins the river nearby. Higher ground is all nice 2nd growth red and white pine about 100 years old. REALLY nice white pine stand across the river on the neighbors 80. Plus oak, ash, popple (aspen), maple, jack pine, balsam, black and white spruce, alder, blue beech -- considerable mixture.
I have 3 saws that could fall into the firewood catagory: Stihl 024, Jonsered 2050, and an Echo CS-510.
For me the Echo CS-510 is without doubt the best firewood cutting saw that I own. The 024 makes a great limbing and construction saw and it is smooth running and reliable, but it isn't quite powerful enough out in the woods.
Too bad it's not an 026.
The Jons. 2050 is def. a consumer-quality saw and feels sort of cheap and prone to failure (which it has in several places). Power is okay, but the wimpy oiler SUCKS and it tends to kickback on starting. The snap-on air cleaner should be called a "fall-off" air cleaner instead.
I guess they ditched the 2050. If so, no great loss.
The Echo CS-510 has the power, the smoothness, easy-starting, high build-quality, and easy maintenance. Not sure if it's considered a "pro" saw but it's way ahead of the Jons. 2050 in quality and about like the Stihl. I find myself using the Echo more and more over the Jonsered.
Would be great to try out a Husky 246xp & 353, the Solo 651, or a 50cc Redmax, Shindaiwa, or Dolmar.
Also have my old Jons. 451 which was a good saw and I should try to rebuild it.
Cutting in my black ash swamp the past week or more. Cut a trail thru swamp so I can sled wood out with my black poly tobaggon. Had just enough snow and overnight we got LOTS more. Snowing like heck right now. Deer eating my white cedars near house.
Black ash swamp is an eerie place and feels sort of like you are cutting in a graveyard as the trees have weird creepy shapes. Some standing dead and fallen stuff that tends not to rot. Split the chunks up right in the frozen swamp with a Sotz Monster and then sled them out to the road where I pile it up and will haul it to my woodpile come spring.
Ash swamp peters out in a big open brushy peat filled extinct lake basin thru which a creek runs and joins the river nearby. Higher ground is all nice 2nd growth red and white pine about 100 years old. REALLY nice white pine stand across the river on the neighbors 80. Plus oak, ash, popple (aspen), maple, jack pine, balsam, black and white spruce, alder, blue beech -- considerable mixture.