Hello,
I am in the market for a chainsaw.
I did as much reading as I could over many places before deciding to ask here.
I am interested in either a Stihl or a Husqvarna.
Living in Australia I looked at the different spec models available for similar prices.
I understand there is a 50/50 split who likes what and why, so I am not looking at that.
What I am trying to gauge is which is going to cut faster. At the end of the day thats what matters, am I going to be cutting for 1 hour or 2 hours because the saw was slower.
Having this in mind... I am trying to understand these specs:
Example:
Stihl MS180 - 1.5kw, 4.10kg. $299
Husqvarna 120mk ii - 1.4kw, 4.85kg. $350
Stihl MS211 - 1.7kw, 4.30kg. $599
Husqvarna 435e series 2 - 1.6kw, 4.40kg. $699
etc etc.
My point is what I am tryng to figure out is these numbers.
If I buy a stihl for the same cost or cheaper than a husqvarna all the models at the same price range the stihl is always lighter and has more KW.
Look at professional models or anything such as the XP husqvarna 572 vs Stihl MS 462 (Stihl lighter more kw) or the Husqvarna 440 e series 2, 1.8kw while stihl MS 251 has 2.2kw and so on.
It seems based on like for like (cost wise) there is always more KW in the stihl for the price of the husqvarna, with husqvana you gotta spend more to get the kw.
Now the only thing I do notice is that the Huskies all come with more CC but less KW than stihl. So larger engine but less power.
Looking at buying a first time chainsaw, there is no"which one dis you grow up using" or whatever. Its simply which cuts faster.
mS Stihl 180 with 1.5kW or Husky 120mkii with 1.4kw?
What about if i go ms211 or husky 435 etc?
Just trying to figure out which ones giving me more for less $. Based on paper Stihls giving more kw and lighter saw for same or less cost than husqvarna is... But as everything in life there may be more to what makes a saw cut faster/slower and those numbers may not mean anything and that is why im here trying to figure out do i buy stihl or husqvarna.
Being in Australia Ill be cutting Iron bark and yellowbox etc which are all one of the hardest/dense woods in the world.
I am in the market for a chainsaw.
I did as much reading as I could over many places before deciding to ask here.
I am interested in either a Stihl or a Husqvarna.
Living in Australia I looked at the different spec models available for similar prices.
I understand there is a 50/50 split who likes what and why, so I am not looking at that.
What I am trying to gauge is which is going to cut faster. At the end of the day thats what matters, am I going to be cutting for 1 hour or 2 hours because the saw was slower.
Having this in mind... I am trying to understand these specs:
Example:
Stihl MS180 - 1.5kw, 4.10kg. $299
Husqvarna 120mk ii - 1.4kw, 4.85kg. $350
Stihl MS211 - 1.7kw, 4.30kg. $599
Husqvarna 435e series 2 - 1.6kw, 4.40kg. $699
etc etc.
My point is what I am tryng to figure out is these numbers.
If I buy a stihl for the same cost or cheaper than a husqvarna all the models at the same price range the stihl is always lighter and has more KW.
Look at professional models or anything such as the XP husqvarna 572 vs Stihl MS 462 (Stihl lighter more kw) or the Husqvarna 440 e series 2, 1.8kw while stihl MS 251 has 2.2kw and so on.
It seems based on like for like (cost wise) there is always more KW in the stihl for the price of the husqvarna, with husqvana you gotta spend more to get the kw.
Now the only thing I do notice is that the Huskies all come with more CC but less KW than stihl. So larger engine but less power.
Looking at buying a first time chainsaw, there is no"which one dis you grow up using" or whatever. Its simply which cuts faster.
mS Stihl 180 with 1.5kW or Husky 120mkii with 1.4kw?
What about if i go ms211 or husky 435 etc?
Just trying to figure out which ones giving me more for less $. Based on paper Stihls giving more kw and lighter saw for same or less cost than husqvarna is... But as everything in life there may be more to what makes a saw cut faster/slower and those numbers may not mean anything and that is why im here trying to figure out do i buy stihl or husqvarna.
Being in Australia Ill be cutting Iron bark and yellowbox etc which are all one of the hardest/dense woods in the world.